@s-ui/react-atom-icon
> Atom Element: Icon
Supply chain provenance
Status for the latest visible version.
Without SLSA provenance there is no cryptographic link between this tarball and the public source — the axios compromise (March 2026) relied on exactly this gap.
Maintainers
Keywords
Accepted risks
Findings the reviewer chose to accept rather than block on.
| Source | Rule | Reason | Accepted by | When |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| publish-pattern | dormant-publish | AI (publish-pattern): Monorepo component with documented history; long gap followed by minor update is consistent with normal maintenance cadence. | ai |
Versions (showing 7 of 7)
| Version | Deps | Published |
|---|---|---|
| 1.26.0 | 2 / 0 | |
| 1.25.0 | 2 / 0 | |
| 1.24.0 | 2 / 0 | |
| 1.23.0 | 2 / 0 | |
| 1.22.0 | 2 / 0 | |
| 1.21.0 | 2 / 0 | |
| 1.20.0 | 2 / 0 |
v1.25.0
1 findingPackage was published without Sigstore provenance. Only ~12% of npm packages have provenance, so this is common but not ideal.
v1.24.0
1 findingPackage was published without Sigstore provenance. Only ~12% of npm packages have provenance, so this is common but not ideal.
v1.23.0
1 findingPackage was published without Sigstore provenance. Only ~12% of npm packages have provenance, so this is common but not ideal.
v1.22.0
1 findingPackage was published without Sigstore provenance. Consider requesting the maintainer enable provenance via CI/CD.
v1.21.0
1 findingPackage was published without Sigstore provenance. Only ~12% of npm packages have provenance, so this is common but not ideal.
v1.20.0
1 findingPackage was published without Sigstore provenance. Only ~12% of npm packages have provenance, so this is common but not ideal.