GitGuardian is famous for its annual State of Secrets Sprawl report. In their 2023 report, they found over 10 million exposed passwords, API keys, and other credentials exposed in public GitHub commits. The takeaways in their 2024 report did not just highlight 12.8 million new exposed secrets in GitHub, but a number in the popular Python package repository PyPI. PyPI, short for the Python Package Index, hosts over 20 terabytes of files that are freely available for use in Python projects. If you've ever typed pip install [name of package], it likely pulled that package from PyPI. A lot of people use it too. Whether it's GitHub, PyPI, or others, the report states, "open-source packages make up an estimated 90% of the code run in production today." It's easy to see why that is when these packages help developers avoid the reinvention of millions of wheels every day. In the 2024 report, GitGuardian reported finding over 11,000 exposed _unique _secrets, with 1,000 of them being added to PyPI in 2023. That's not much compared to the 12.8 million new secrets added to GitHub in 2023, but GitHub is orders of magnitude larger. A more distressing fact is that, of the secrets introduced in 2017, nearly 100 were still valid 6-7 years later. They did not have the ability to check all the secrets for validity. Still, over 300 unique and valid secrets were discovered. While this is mildly alarming to the casual observer and not necessarily a threat to random Python developers (as opposed…Read More
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