
Research
/Security News
Malicious npm Packages Target WhatsApp Developers with Remote Kill Switch
Two npm packages masquerading as WhatsApp developer libraries include a kill switch that deletes all files if the phone number isn’t whitelisted.
Sign up here
KeySpot is a tool to help manage environment variables for individuals and teams of developers. The service stores environment variables for your project in a centralized place so you don't have to juggle different .env files for your environements and applications. Once you have signed in at keyspot.app, you can create new records, share them with your team, and access them in code.
See our usage tutorial on YouTube.
$ pip install keyspot
Sign in to KeySpot, and create a record. At the top of each record's page there is an accessKey. Copy the accessKey as you will be using this to access your environment variables in code.
Accessing your environment in code:
import keyspot
record = keyspot.get_record('<accessKey>')
Updating your environment in code:
import keyspot
newVariables = {"newVar1": "foo", "newVar2": "bar"}
update_record('<accessKey>', newVariables)
note: You will want to supply your program with your access key as your only environement variable or a command line argument.
FAQs
Environment variable manager for python
We found that keyspot 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.
Research
/Security News
Two npm packages masquerading as WhatsApp developer libraries include a kill switch that deletes all files if the phone number isn’t whitelisted.
Research
/Security News
Socket uncovered 11 malicious Go packages using obfuscated loaders to fetch and execute second-stage payloads via C2 domains.
Security News
TC39 advances 11 JavaScript proposals, with two moving to Stage 4, bringing better math, binary APIs, and more features one step closer to the ECMAScript spec.