Node Package Manager Supply Chain Attack


On September 15, the Node Package Manager (NPM) repository experienced an ongoing supply chain attack, in which the attackers executed a highly targeted phishing campaign to compromise the account of an NPM package maintainer.

With privileged access, the attackers injected malicious code into widely used JavaScript packages, threatening the entire software ecosystem. Notably, the attack has disrupted several key NPM packages, including those integral to application development and cryptography. According to StepSecurity, the malicious actors behind this incident used similar techniques with the Nx supply chain attack last month. As of September 16, researchers at Socket have already identified close to 500 impacted NPM packages.

Read more…
Source: Trend Micro


Sign up for the Cyber Security Review Newsletter
The latest cyber security news and insights delivered right to your inbox


Related:

  • Emotet, once the world’s most dangerous malware, is back

    November 16, 2021

    Emotet, once described as “the world’s most dangerous malware” before being taken down by a major international police operation, is apparently back – and being installed on Windows systems infected with TrickBot malware. Emotet malware provided its controllers with a backdoor into compromised machines, which could be leased out to other groups, including ransomware gangs, to ...

  • 200M Adult Cam Model, User Records Exposed in Stripchat Breach

    November 16, 2021

    A database containing the highly sensitive information on both users and models on the popular adult cam site StripChat were discovered online, left completely unprotected. The data exposure puts models and users at risk of extortion, violence and more. Stripchat is a popular site founded in 2016 and based in Cyprus that sells live access to ...

  • QAKBOT Loader Returns With New Techniques and Tools

    November 12, 2021

    QAKBOT is a prevalent information-stealing malware that was first discovered in 2007. In recent years, its detection has become a precursor to many critical and widespread ransomware attacks. It has been identified as a key “malware installation-as-a-service” botnet that enables many of today’s campaigns. Toward the end of September 2021, we noted that QAKBOT operators resumed ...

  • BotenaGo botnet targets millions of IoT devices with 33 exploits

    November 11, 2021

    The new BotenaGo malware botnet has been discovered using over thirty exploits to attack millions of routers and IoT devices. BotenaGo was written in Golang (Go), which has been exploding in popularity in recent years, with malware authors loving it for making payloads that are harder to detect and reverse engineer. In the case of BotenaGo, only ...

  • EU pharmaceutical giants run old, vulnerable apps and fail to use encryption in login forms

    November 11, 2021

    New research into the security posture of Europe’s top pharmaceutical giants has revealed concerning levels of vulnerabilities and weak spots in web applications. On Thursday, Outpost24 published new research that claims the top 10 pharmaceutical countries in the region are all failing to maintain a robust security posture — with 80% considered to be “critically exposed” ...

  • TeamTNT Upgrades Arsenal, Refines Focus on Kubernetes and GPU Environments

    November 11, 2021

    In previous entries, we described how the hacking group TeamTNT targeted unsecured Redis instances, exposed Docker APIs, and vulnerable Kubernetes clusters in order to deploy cryptocurrency-mining payloads and credential stealers. TeamTNT was one of the first cybercriminal groups to focus on cloud service providers (CSPs), specifically the metadata stored on elastic computing instances being run ...