pyobjc-framework-IOBluetooth
Advanced tools
Shell access
Supply chain riskThis module accesses the system shell. Accessing the system shell increases the risk of executing arbitrary code.
Found 1 instance in 1 package
URL strings
Supply chain riskPackage contains fragments of external URLs or IP addresses, which the package may be accessing at runtime.
Found 1 instance in 1 package
Filesystem access
Supply chain riskAccesses the file system, and could potentially read sensitive data.
Found 1 instance in 1 package
Shell access
Supply chain riskThis module accesses the system shell. Accessing the system shell increases the risk of executing arbitrary code.
Found 14 instances in 14 packages
Native code
Supply chain riskContains native code (e.g., compiled binaries or shared libraries). Including native code can obscure malicious behavior.
Found 20 instances in 20 packages
Uses eval
Supply chain riskPackage uses dynamic code execution (e.g., eval()), which is a dangerous practice. This can prevent the code from running in certain environments and increases the risk that the code may contain exploits or malicious behavior.
Found 20 instances in 20 packages
Network access
Supply chain riskThis module accesses the network.
Found 10 instances in 10 packages
URL strings
Supply chain riskPackage contains fragments of external URLs or IP addresses, which the package may be accessing at runtime.
Found 6 instances in 6 packages
Filesystem access
Supply chain riskAccesses the file system, and could potentially read sensitive data.
Found 14 instances in 14 packages
Unidentified License
License(Experimental) Something that seems like a license was found, but its contents could not be matched with a known license.
Found 4 instances in 2 packages
Non-permissive License
License(Experimental) A license not known to be considered permissive was found.
Found 2 instances in 2 packages
Copyleft License
License(Experimental) Copyleft license information was found.
Found 2 instances in 2 packages
Environment variable access
Supply chain riskPackage accesses environment variables, which may be a sign of credential stuffing or data theft.
Found 2 instances in 2 packages