
Security News
Open VSX Begins Implementing Pre-Publish Security Checks After Repeated Supply Chain Incidents
Following multiple malicious extension incidents, Open VSX outlines new safeguards designed to catch risky uploads earlier.
@privy-io/react-auth
Advanced tools

The Privy React Auth SDK allows you to authenticate your users with Privy in your React app.
Check out our demo!
Our changelog contains the latest information about new releases, including features, fixes, and upcoming changes.
We use Semantic Versioning to track changes.
pnpm install @privy-io/react-auth
Setup your integration by wrapping any React components that will use the Privy SDK with the PrivyProvider. This gives your wrapped components access to the Privy SDK and authentication context.
// Import the PrivyProvider
import {PrivyProvider} from '@privy-io/react-auth';
// Wrap any components that will use the Privy SDK with the PrivyProvider – for example, in your `app` or `index` file
<PrivyProvider appId="<your-privy-app-id>">
<Component {...pageProps} />
</PrivyProvider>;
Now, from within your React components, you can access the Privy SDK via the usePrivy hook!
// Import the usePrivy hook
import {usePrivy} from '@privy-io/react-auth';
// Call usePrivy() from inside your React components
const {ready, authenticated, user, login, logout} = usePrivy();
FAQs
React client for the Privy Auth API
The npm package @privy-io/react-auth receives a total of 90,365 weekly downloads. As such, @privy-io/react-auth popularity was classified as popular.
We found that @privy-io/react-auth demonstrated a healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released less than a year ago. It has 8 open source maintainers 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.

Security News
Following multiple malicious extension incidents, Open VSX outlines new safeguards designed to catch risky uploads earlier.

Research
/Security News
Threat actors compromised four oorzc Open VSX extensions with more than 22,000 downloads, pushing malicious versions that install a staged loader, evade Russian-locale systems, pull C2 from Solana memos, and steal macOS credentials and wallets.

Security News
Lodash 4.17.23 marks a security reset, with maintainers rebuilding governance and infrastructure to support long-term, sustainable maintenance.