Developer Who Intentionally Corrupted His Libraries Wants NPM To Restore His Publishing Rights
Remember that developer who intentionally corrupted his two libraries which collectively had over 20 million weekly downloads and thousands of dependent projects? In the immediate aftermath he'd complained on Twitter that NPM "has reverted to a previous version of the faker.js package and Github has suspended my access to all public and private projects. I have 100s of projects. #AaronSwartz." That was January 6th, and within about a week GitHub had restored his access, while one of his two libraries (faker-js) was forked by its community to create a community-driven project. But Thursday the developer announced on his Twitter account:What's up @Github? Ten days since you removed my ability to publish to NPM and fix the Infinity Zalgo bug in colors.js Never responded to my support emails. I have 100s of packages I need to maintain. Everyone makes programming mistakes from time to time. Nobody is perfect. It hasn't been confirmed that NPM has actually blocked his ability to publish - but the tweet already appears to be attracting reactions from other developers on social media.
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