Emergent
Security FAQ

How does Emergent (emergent.sh) security compare to alternatives?

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Short Answer

Emergent (emergent.sh) sits in the same security posture class as Lovable, Bolt.new, Base44. The differentiators are specific: Emergent (emergent.sh) has no public critical CVE on file, its defaults around Row Level Security (RLS) policies differ, and its primary stack (Supabase (Postgres + RLS) as the database) changes which mistakes are easy to make.

Detailed Answer

The actual differentiators (not marketing claims)

"Which platform is most secure" is the wrong question — every platform we track has secure and insecure deployments. The right question is "where does each platform make it easier or harder to ship a secure app." On that axis:

vs. related platforms

  • **Lovable** — has a documented incident (Lovable RLS Vulnerability). Primary failure mode: complete database exposure via missing rls. Stack: Supabase (Postgres + RLS) as the database.
  • **Bolt.new** — has no documented critical CVE. Primary failure mode: exposed api keys. Stack: Supabase (Postgres + RLS) as the database.
  • **Base44** — has no documented critical CVE. Primary failure mode: exposed api keys. Stack: Supabase (Postgres + RLS) as the database.

**Emergent (emergent.sh)** — has no documented critical CVE on file. Primary failure mode: exposed supabase credentials with missing rls. Stack: Supabase (Postgres + RLS) as the database.

Defaults comparison

The defaults Emergent (emergent.sh) ships with determine the shape of mistakes developers make. Emergent (emergent.sh) + Supabase: RLS is off by default — every table is a potential leak until someone turns it on. This is the platform's biggest default-level weakness and the direct cause of the most common Emergent (emergent.sh) finding class.

The overlapping truth

Across Emergent (emergent.sh), Lovable, Bolt.new, Base44 and every other vibe-coding platform we scan, the same vulnerability classes dominate: exposed secrets, missing access controls, weak auth defaults, missing security headers. Switching platforms doesn't solve these — the developer's security practices dominate the platform choice. "Which platform is most secure" has a less useful answer than "which platform have *you* scanned and fixed?"

When the platform choice actually matters for security

It matters when: (a) you need specific compliance certifications the platform must carry (SOC 2 Type 2, HIPAA), (b) you need fine-grained access control primitives (Row Level Security (RLS) policies granularity), (c) you have a regulatory data-residency requirement and need confirmed region controls, or (d) you need a specific auth model (passwordless, SAML, etc.). For everything else, platform choice is a feature/ergonomics question, not a security question.

The verdict on Emergent (emergent.sh) vs alternatives

Emergent (emergent.sh) is in the same security bucket as its peers. The security outcome depends on whether you scan and fix, not on which logo is on the build tool. If you've run a VAS scan on a Emergent (emergent.sh) app and remediated findings, your app is more secure than an unscanned app on any platform — full stop.

Security Research & Statistics

10.3%

of Lovable applications (170 out of 1,645) had exposed user data in the CVE-2025-48757 incident

Source: CVE-2025-48757 security advisory

4.45 million USD

average cost of a data breach in 2023

Source: IBM Cost of a Data Breach Report 2023

500,000+

developers using vibe coding platforms like Lovable, Bolt, and Replit

Source: Combined platform statistics 2024-2025

Expert Perspectives

There's a new kind of coding I call 'vibe coding', where you fully give in to the vibes, embrace exponentials, and forget that the code even exists.

Andrej KarpathyFormer Tesla AI Director, OpenAI Co-founder

Vibe coding your way to a production codebase is clearly risky. Most of the work we do as software engineers involves evolving existing systems, where the quality and understandability of the underlying code is crucial.

Simon WillisonSecurity Researcher, Django Co-creator

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More Questions About This Topic

Which platform is the "most secure" for building apps — is there a clear winner?

No — the question is malformed. The security outcome is determined by the developer's practices, not the platform. That said, platforms that enforce Row Level Security (RLS) policies by default reduce the easy-to-make mistakes; platforms with built-in security headers reduce header gaps. For any choice you'd make among Emergent (emergent.sh), Lovable, Bolt.new, Base44, a scanned-and-fixed app beats an unscanned one on "most secure" by a wide margin.

Should I migrate from Emergent (emergent.sh) to a more secure platform?

Rarely. The vulnerabilities we find in Emergent (emergent.sh) apps — exposed supabase credentials with missing rls, client-side api key leakage — are not Emergent (emergent.sh)-specific; they follow the developer to any platform that doesn't explicitly block them. Migrate for feature reasons (need SAML, need specific compliance, need primitive X) or cost reasons. Don't migrate because you think the grass is more secure on the other side — it isn't, and the migration itself introduces new security gaps.

Do security trade-offs differ between Emergent (emergent.sh) and traditional (hand-coded) development?

Yes, and not in the way most people assume. Traditional development has larger attack surface (server config, dependency management, CI/CD pipelines) but benefits from mature security tooling and established patterns. Emergent (emergent.sh) — and its peers — reduce infrastructure risk but amplify application-layer risk: AI-generated code prioritizes functionality over security defaults, and the speed of iteration encourages shipping before review. The trade-off is "larger mature surface" vs. "smaller but riskier surface." Scanning closes the gap either way.