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Developer posts secret key on GitHub, loses $40K in 2 minutes
(cointelegraph.com)
This is a most excellent place for technology news and articles.
If you have your secret keys in your repository you've already fucked up, long before you accidentally make that repository public.
And that’s why you always ~~leave a note~~ recheck your .gitignore file before committing
Does Microsoft's GitHub offer any pre-receive hook configuration to reject commits pushed that contain private keys? Surely that would be a better feature to opt all users into rather than Windows Copilot.
They notify but iirc only if you push a commit to a public repo. The dev in the article pushed it to a private repo, then later made the repo public.
The docs say they can reject if you enable push protection, which is also available for private repos, just as a paid feature. It's free for public, but still needs to be enabled.