No Stupid Questions
No such thing. Ask away!
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Short answer is no. Safety of a program is in its implementation, not in the visibility of the code.
Most of the internet runs on opensource code, the most companies in the world that requires security rely on open source programs, while companies relying on proprietary software are victims of hackers, malwares, ransomware every second (I am not going to name names to avoid useless wars).
That said, not all open source code is safe to use, as no all closed source software is safe to use. Bigger projects, used by many and used by experts are usually safe, most often even safer than close source counterparts.
Smaller projects are as safe as any random software downloaded from internet, unless you are able to read the code yourself. Many are safe, many aren't, few are malevolent.
Be careful and research the program you are installing for security concerns.
If you want to download big stuff like debian, fedora, blender, gimp, krita, chromium, vscode, docker, k8s (I don't know what you are into) just be sure that you trust the source from were you download binaries. The same as for any closed source software
Technically, vscode isn't open source. It's in the same situation of chrome vs chromium.
Majority is the same, but Microsoft has some non-open source parts of vscode.
Vscode repo contains "code - oss"
There is VSCodium that is released under MIT without the Microsoft proprietery stuff.
Except Chromium can still access the Chrome extension store. The VSCode extension store is not included with the OSS version, which seriously hampers the usefulness of the app.
I know, but I didn't want to add too many details to the answer. Also because the core of vscode is open source and can be read by anyone