If you find suspicious R expressions, report the file to jamovi’s security team at security@jamovi.org. And if someone mentions the “0.9.5.5 exploit,” you can now tell them the full story—a legend rooted in a misunderstood PoC, but a valuable lesson nonetheless.
# Check your jamovi version jamovi --version unzip suspect_file.omv -d temp_dir/ cat temp_dir/metadata.json | grep -i "system(" jamovi 0955 exploit
Does that mean jamovi is perfectly secure? No software is. But the real threats in statistical computing lie not in debunked ancient versions, but in complacency about updates, social engineering of module downloads, and the inherent risk of evaluating data with code. Upgrade to the latest jamovi, enable security settings, and treat every data file like any other executable: if you didn’t create it, verify it first. Appendix: How to Test Your Jamovi Security If you find suspicious R expressions, report the