`python-certifi-win32`, a small Python package, has been left in an unmaintained state, and its author recommends `pip-system-certs` as a replacement (by the same author). This has all been properly disclosed by the author. The old package causes some nasty errors on the newer versions of Python, so I want to spread the word the most as I can (yes, I've spent a couple of hours debugging). There are about 2 pages of questions mentioning the faulty package. I already started adding comments, but now I wonder if I should outright edit answers that recommend installing it to update the info. What are the community standards on this regard? Edit: after reading the answers, I think some clarifications of the packages involved are needed: - The new package is a direct replacement of the old one. They are not competing in any sense. The first package is Windows specific. To support other OSs, the author decided to create a new package. - This package is not the usual one a programmer would import and call some functions. Actually, it monkeypatches some other common Python libs of the environment where it's installed, and that's it. The programmer can continue working as usual and never look back again. - The packages do not differ too much in the Python versions they support. So it's not that the new package has been made to support the new versions of Python. But, because of the lack of maintenance of the old package, it does cause errors when used with new Python versions. - The error I found is rather catastrophic. It breaks the `pip`, Python's main package installer. Worse still, there aren't many clues that the old package is the culprit. In fact, some questions on SO about this are asking for a solution to the sudden error that they don't know where it came from. It's because of all these specifics that I've considered editing the answers. I don't want to downvote them. They were good when they were wrote, and can still be *if only they propose the new package instead of the old one.* For the same reasons, I haven't considered creating a new answer, as in most cases that would mean to write an exact copy of the answer that mentions the old package, and replace it for the new one.