Quick Facts
- Category: Technology
- Published: 2026-04-30 18:44:25
- Why SPIFFE Is the Identity Backbone for Autonomous AI and Non-Human Agents
- How to Automatically Diagnose Failures in LLM Multi-Agent Systems: A Step-by-Step Guide Using the Who&When Framework
- Accelerating JavaScript Startup in V8: A Guide to Explicit Compile Hints
- Four-Week Diet Shift Reverses Biological Age in Seniors, Landmark Study Reveals
- How to Add Effective Examples to Man Pages: A Step-by-Step Guide for Beginners and Infrequent Users

Elementary Cloud, the Elementary dbt package, and all other CLI versions weren't affected. Open source software with more than 1 million monthly downloads was compromised after a threat actor exploited a vulnerability in the developers’ account workflow that gave access to its signing keys and other sensitive information. On Friday, unknown attackers exploited the vulnerability to push a new version of element-data, a command-line interface that helps users monitor performance and anomalies in machine-learning systems. When run, the malicious package scoured systems for sensitive data, including user profiles, warehouse credentials, cloud provider keys, API tokens, and SSH keys, developers said. The malicious version was tagged as 0.23.3 and was published to the developers’ Python Package Index and Docker image accounts. It was removed about 12 hours later, on Saturday.
“Users who installed 0.23.3, or who pulled and ran the affected Docker image, should assume that any credentials accessible to the environment where it ran may have been exposed,” the developers wrote.Read full article Comments