...no?
Going to go on a wildly controversial limb here.
- We know that people copy and paste code from Stack Overflow. It's kind of an endemic at this point.
- There's little that warnings actually do to prevent people from just plopping code from some site on the Internet right into their editor and shipping it out into production.
- The developer is ultimately responsible for the quality of their code, and it falls on them - not us if they ship crappy code.
- (mumbles something about legal and licensing here). I think there was an instance in which someone had to rewrite their entire Git history to rip that code out because it was so poisonous to their license and business model.
- Oh, also valid questions about bi-directional text do exist. I didn't think this needed saying but I'll say it for completeness.
So personally I'm seeing this as something to use to our advantage, within reason.
Most modern editors do seem to come with something that detects this on the behalf of the user, and it's not unfair to expect some amount of testing - either unit or acceptance - on code that is written. Yes, even homework code is executed or tested.
We don't have a warranty or guarantee of fitness for the code that is written, and this would serve as a far louder wake-up call to the folks that want to copy-paste stuff rather than the easy-to-dismiss alert/warning notification that was built over April Fool's.
Yes, I know this is somewhat evil, but at some point, we have to let go of their hand.
A quick addendum: this exploit is reliant on potentially dangerous code near potentially innocuous code, like an in-line comment or code that isn't commented properly. I'm not saying this to minimize the threat, but I really want to highlight that the biggest attack vector of this seems to be the programmer themselves, as they may hastily copy code from one part of the Internet and another into their own source.
\u....
character references which can change the semantics of the tokens itself like with"a string\u0022 \u002f* a comment */
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