
Product
Socket Firewall Now Blocks Malicious VS Code and Open VSX Extensions
Socket Firewall blocks malicious VS Code and Open VSX extensions before install, protecting developers from compromised editor marketplaces.
@hackerai/local
Advanced tools
HackerAI Local Sandbox Client - Execute commands on your local machine
HackerAI Local Sandbox Client - Execute commands on your local machine from HackerAI.
npx @hackerai/local@latest --token YOUR_TOKEN
Or install globally:
npm install -g @hackerai/local
hackerai-local --token YOUR_TOKEN
npx @hackerai/local@latest --token hsb_abc123
Commands run directly on your host OS. The client connects to HackerAI and relays commands in real-time.
| Option | Description |
|---|---|
--token TOKEN | Authentication token from HackerAI Settings (required) |
--name NAME | Optional connection name fallback (default: hostname) |
--convex-url URL | Override backend URL (for development) |
--help, -h | Show help message |
Commands run directly on your OS without any isolation. Only connect machines you trust and control. The client auto-terminates after 1 hour of inactivity.
MIT
FAQs
HackerAI Local Sandbox Client - Execute commands on your local machine
The npm package @hackerai/local receives a total of 246 weekly downloads. As such, @hackerai/local popularity was classified as not popular.
We found that @hackerai/local demonstrated a healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released less than a year ago. It has 1 open source maintainer collaborating on the project.
Did you know?

Socket for GitHub automatically highlights issues in each pull request and monitors the health of all your open source dependencies. Discover the contents of your packages and block harmful activity before you install or update your dependencies.

Product
Socket Firewall blocks malicious VS Code and Open VSX extensions before install, protecting developers from compromised editor marketplaces.

Research
More than 140 Mastra npm packages were compromised in a supply chain attack that used a typosquatted dependency to deliver a cross-platform infostealer during installation.

Research
/Security News
A new npm package tests AI malware scanners with prompt injection, safety-triggering comments, context flooding, and obfuscated JavaScript.