
Research
/Security News
Toptal’s GitHub Organization Hijacked: 10 Malicious Packages Published
Threat actors hijacked Toptal’s GitHub org, publishing npm packages with malicious payloads that steal tokens and attempt to wipe victim systems.
latoken-api-v2-python-client
Advanced tools
If you find any bugs or want to contribute, feel free to submit your improvements.
Source code https://github.com/LATOKEN/latoken-api-v2-python-client
REST API Documentation https://api.latoken.com/doc/v2/
STOMP Websockets Documentation https://api.latoken.com/doc/ws/
LATOKEN API Telegram https://t.me/latoken_api
Register an account on LATOKEN <https://latoken.com>
_.
Generate an API key in your account <https://latoken.com/account/apikeys>
_ with relevant permissions.
There are 4 levels of API key permissions at LATOKEN:
Install latoken-api-v2-python-client library:
.. code-block:: bash
pip install latoken-api-v2-python-client
REST API <https://github.com/LATOKEN/latoken-api-v2-python-client/blob/main/examples/rest_example.py>
_Websockets <https://github.com/LATOKEN/latoken-api-v2-python-client/blob/main/examples/websocket_example.py>
_FAQs
LATOKEN REST API and STOMP Websocket python implementation
We found that latoken-api-v2-python-client 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
Threat actors hijacked Toptal’s GitHub org, publishing npm packages with malicious payloads that steal tokens and attempt to wipe victim systems.
Research
/Security News
Socket researchers investigate 4 malicious npm and PyPI packages with 56,000+ downloads that install surveillance malware.
Security News
The ongoing npm phishing campaign escalates as attackers hijack the popular 'is' package, embedding malware in multiple versions.