Vibe-Coded Malware: Fake VS Code Extension Slips Past Review
A so-called vibe-coded malware incident has reignited concerns about Visual Studio Code’s marketplace security. Security researchers discovered an AI-generated test extension called “susvsex”, created by the publisher “suspublisher18.” Despite an honest description revealing its behavior, the extension was approved on November 5, 2025. It demonstrated data-exfiltration and encryption routines, clearly labeled as experimental, yet it still passed Microsoft’s automated review.

Vibe Hacking: Cybercrime with Minimal Effort But Huge Impact
Who needs years of coding when you’ve got ChatGPT and ten minutes to kill? Welcome to vibe hacking: a new era where cybercriminals let AI do the heavy lifting. It’s slick. It’s lazy. And yes, it’s working. Today’s hackers aren’t all hoodie-clad geniuses reverse-engineering firmware. Many are just casually prompting AI tools to write malware, build fake websites, or even

Vibe Coding and the Real-Life Implications: Can it Be Safe?
The software development world is buzzing with a new term: vibe coding. Coined by AI expert Andrej Karpathy, vibe coding refers to a revolutionary shift where developers rely heavily on artificial intelligence tools to generate code from simple prompts, rather than writing every line manually. This approach is basically transforming the way software is built, making coding faster and more
