Hanlon's razor seems to work well here. I wouldn't be surprised if it were a mix of people who want some real or imagined benefit from bug reports without doing or understanding the work, and people who just think LLM output is gospel—a gospel that must be spread.
Agreed, but also: if it works and is merged, you get credited, and your Github account gets a better reputation. This makes it easier to deploy attacks like xz as you have a track record of merges.
Also, plain vandalism, because people are like that.
Edit: probably also bug bounty attempts. If you’ve ever been on the receiving side of a Responsible Disclosure program , you’ll know what I mean.
Edit edit: it’s all in the article, darnit. Sorry.
I ran an RD program years ago. Lots of bored and/or poor, greedy devs submitted metric shit tons of pseudo vulnerabilities (“if I do ctrl-u I can see source code on your web site!” No shit, Sherlock.). I can only imagine how much easier this has become with the help of generative ai…