According to the 2025 DORA State of DevOps report , three out of four developers now use AI coding tools daily. That number keeps climbing. By the end of 2026, over 80% of individual developers will rely on AI assistants to write, review and refactor code. But here’s the problem: The same research found that as AI usage increases, delivery stability tends to decrease. Code ships faster than governance can follow. When developers start accepting AI-generated suggestions without fully understanding subtle issues buried in the logic, the understanding gap between writing code and comprehending its production impact widens. In other words, speed without control is a false economy. The Control Gap When AI generates code at the speed of a keystroke, traditional review cycles struggle to keep up. Pull requests pile up. Code reviews become bottlenecks. Teams feel pressure to approve changes faster, and subtle bugs slip through. The ...
Bad actors took over a npm maintainer account and have published two malicious packages designed to steal credentials, API keys, and other secrets from the computers of victims who download them from the repository. Analysts with Sonatype’s Security Research Team wrote in a report that the two packages – sbx-mask and touch-adv – likely are more than test packages, with the attackers hijacking the publisher account to take advantage of the trust maintainers build with developers to steal valuable information, in this case, secrets that can include credentials, certificates, or API keys. Sonatype is tracking the packages under Sonatype-2026-001276 and Sonatype-2026-001275 , adding that the malware campaign is still active and under investigation. The attacks haven’t been attributed to a threat actor yet. Sonatype reported the packages this week to npm. The malicious packages are only the latest examples of a rising trend of bad actors targeting open code repositori...