
Ladybird Browser ends public pull requests due to AI and security concerns
Ladybird Browser has announced that it will no longer accept public pull requests, limiting code changes to project maintainers as the team prepares for its first alpha release. Creator Andreas Kling said the decision is a response to the rise of generative AI, which can now produce large code contributions quickly, even when the author may not fully understand the security or functional impact.
The team says this is especially important for a browser, since it processes untrusted content from the internet directly on users’ machines. A single hidden vulnerability could put users at risk, while reviewing AI generated pull requests would add more responsibility and review burden for maintainers. As part of the change, all open public pull requests are being closed, and external forks will not be treated as informal review queues.
Contributors are now being encouraged to focus on bug reports, reduced test cases, standards discussion, website testing, security reports, and technical feedback. Ladybird remains open source, with its codebase still publicly available, but the project is tightening how code enters the official repository as AI generated contributions become harder to assess.






Comments
It makes sense when King brads about rewriting 10% of Ladybird to Rust using AI it attracts many AI bros.
Now, cash reserve may already started to running low (no financial report has been published yet) and the alpha version will not be a in-place replacement of other browsers (so few companies would sponsor it), there is still many years of work and the initial $1 million will not be enough (and who knows how great Github finances are).
Ultimately, since this project is not a community one (where board directors are elected) but Wanstrath and Kling are the only one that pick up board directors, they can get rid of all regular contributors without much excuses (because AI seems the only one they've given so far) and the project is not mature enough to get a successful fork.
We've been waiting years for this Ladybird get off the ground, we still need to wait few more years to see how high it will fly.
I Think Ladybird Browser Should Be Moved To Codeberg Or SourceHut Or GitLab Instead...
Codeberg is an excellent suggestion.
Yes. Github is awful. I am perma banned for no reason and Microsoft even deleted an email I made to register just because it was so mad I was not using Outlook or Gmail