
Security News
OWASP 2025 Top 10 Adds Software Supply Chain Failures, Ranked Top Community Concern
OWASP’s 2025 Top 10 introduces Software Supply Chain Failures as a new category, reflecting rising concern over dependency and build system risks.
@times-components/article-label
Advanced tools
An article label is similar to an article flag, in that it is attached to a particular article as a piece of styled textual data. Article label, however, indicates which section an article is located in (e.g. "NEWS" or "COMMENT", or sometimes what content an article has (e.g. "VIDEO" or "YOUTUBE").
Please read CONTRIBUTING.md before contributing to this package
Please see our main README.md to get the project running locally
The code can be formatted and linted in accordance with the agreed standards.
yarn fmt
yarn lint
This package uses yarn (latest) to run unit tests on each platform with jest.
yarn test:web
Visit the official storybook to see our available article label templates.
FAQs
The article label
The npm package @times-components/article-label receives a total of 2,085 weekly downloads. As such, @times-components/article-label popularity was classified as popular.
We found that @times-components/article-label demonstrated a healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released less than a year ago. It has 3 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
OWASP’s 2025 Top 10 introduces Software Supply Chain Failures as a new category, reflecting rising concern over dependency and build system risks.

Research
/Security News
Socket researchers discovered nine malicious NuGet packages that use time-delayed payloads to crash applications and corrupt industrial control systems.

Security News
Socket CTO Ahmad Nassri discusses why supply chain attacks now target developer machines and what AI means for the future of enterprise security.