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All news with #supply chain compromise tag

525 articles · page 26 of 27

AI-powered Nx malware exposes 2,180 GitHub accounts

🔒 A backdoored NPM package published from the Nx repository delivered a post-install credential stealer named telemetry.js, which targeted Linux and macOS systems for GitHub and npm tokens, SSH keys, .env files and crypto wallets. The malware exfiltrated harvested secrets to public repositories named s1ngularity-repository. Attackers unusually used AI CLI tools (Claude, Q, Gemini) to run tuned LLM prompts for better credential harvesting. Nx and GitHub removed the packages, revoked tokens, and implemented 2FA, tokenless publishing and manual PR approvals.
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Malicious npm Packages Impersonate Flashbots, Steal Keys

🔑 Researchers found four malicious npm packages impersonating Flashbots and common cryptographic utilities to harvest Ethereum wallet credentials. Uploaded by user "flashbotts" between September 2023 and August 19, 2025, the libraries exfiltrate private keys and mnemonic seed phrases to a Telegram bot and transmit environment data via Mailtrap SMTP. One package also redirects unsigned transactions to an attacker-controlled wallet.
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Wealthsimple Reports Customer Data Breach Linked to Salesloft

🔒 Wealthsimple disclosed a data breach detected on August 30 after attackers accessed a trusted third-party software package. The company said less than 1% of customers had personal information exposed, including contact details, government IDs, account numbers, IP addresses, Social Insurance Numbers, and dates of birth. Wealthsimple stated no funds or passwords were taken; impacted customers are being offered two years of complimentary credit and identity protection and were advised to enable two-factor authentication and remain alert for phishing.
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CRM Supply-Chain Breach via Salesloft Drift Impacts Vendors

🔒 Palo Alto Networks, Zscaler and Cloudflare disclosed a supply-chain breach traced to the Salesloft Drift integration with Salesforce. The compromise exposed business contact information, account/contact/case/opportunity records and, in some instances, OAuth tokens and plaintext support-case content; attachments and files were reportedly not affected. Palo Alto's Unit 42 observed active searches of exfiltrated data and deletion of queries consistent with anti-forensics. Vendors are advising immediate token revocation, credential rotation and comprehensive review of Salesforce logs and SOQL query history.
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Malicious npm Packages Use Ethereum to Deliver Malware

⚠️ ReversingLabs researchers uncovered a supply chain campaign that used Ethereum smart contracts to conceal URLs for malware delivered via rogue GitHub repositories and npm packages. The packages colortoolsv2 and mimelib2 were intentionally minimal and designed to be pulled as dependencies from fraudulent repositories posing as cryptocurrency trading bots. Attackers inflated commit histories with sockpuppet accounts and automated pushes to appear legitimate, then used on-chain storage to hide secondary payload locations and evade URL-scanning defenses.
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Malicious npm Packages Use Ethereum Smart Contracts

🔒 Cybersecurity researchers discovered two malicious npm packages that use Ethereum smart contracts to hide commands and deliver downloader malware to compromised systems. The packages — colortoolsv2 (7 downloads) and mimelib2 (1 download) — were uploaded in July 2025 and removed from the registry. The campaign leveraged a network of GitHub repositories posing as crypto trading tools and is linked to a distribution-as-service operation called Stargazers Ghost Network. Developers are urged to scrutinize packages and maintainers beyond surface metrics before adopting libraries.
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Malicious npm Packages Use Ethereum Smart Contracts

🛡️A new campaign used malicious npm packages to hide command-and-control URLs inside Ethereum smart contracts, evading typical static detection. ReversingLabs researcher Karlo Zanki uncovered packages colortoolsv2 and mimelib2 that delivered second-stage payloads via blockchain-held URLs. The threat also included fake GitHub projects, such as solana-trading-bot-v2, built to appear legitimate. Developers are urged to vet dependencies and maintainers beyond superficial metrics.
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Salesloft Takes Drift Offline After OAuth Token Theft

🔒 Salesloft said it will temporarily take its Drift chatbot service offline after a supply-chain compromise led to the mass theft of OAuth and refresh tokens tied to the Drift AI chat agent. The outage is intended to allow a comprehensive security review and build additional resiliency; Drift chatbot functionality and access will be unavailable during the process. Salesloft is working with cybersecurity partners Mandiant and Coalition while investigators, including Google Threat Intelligence Group, attribute the campaign to UNC6395 and report that more than 700 organizations may be affected.
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Supply-chain Breach Impacts Palo Alto, Zscaler, Cloudflare

🔒 Three major vendors—Palo Alto Networks, Zscaler, and Cloudflare disclosed a supply‑chain breach tied to the Salesloft Drift Salesforce integration that exposed OAuth tokens and customer CRM data. The incident reportedly involved mass exfiltration from Account, Contact, Case and Opportunity records and included business contact data and some plaintext case notes. Vendors recommend rotating credentials, revoking unused OAuth tokens, auditing Salesforce Event Monitoring and reviewing SOQL query logs and connected-app activity for signs of abuse.
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Malicious npm Package Masquerades as Nodemailer Library

⚠️ A malicious npm package named nodejs-smtp impersonating the popular nodemailer library was discovered to both send mail and inject malware into Electron-based desktop cryptocurrency wallets. When imported, it unpacked and tampered with Atomic Wallet on Windows, replacing vendor files and repackaging the app to silently redirect transactions to attacker-controlled addresses. Socket's researchers prompted npm to remove the package and suspend the account.
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Malicious npm Package Mimics Nodemailer, Targets Wallets

🛡️ Researchers found a malicious npm package named nodejs-smtp that impersonated the nodemailer mailer to avoid detection and entice installs. On import the module uses Electron tooling to unpack an app.asar, replace a vendor bundle with a payload, repackage the application, and erase traces to inject a clipper into Windows desktop wallets. The backdoor redirects BTC, ETH, USDT, XRP and SOL transactions to attacker-controlled addresses while retaining legitimate mailer functionality as a cover.
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Supply-Chain Attack on npm Nx Steals Developer Credentials

🔒 A sophisticated supply-chain attack targeted the widely used Nx build-system packages on the npm registry, exposing developer credentials and sensitive files. According to a report from Wiz, attackers published malicious Nx versions on August 26, 2025 that harvested GitHub and npm tokens, SSH keys, environment variables and cryptocurrency wallets. The campaign uniquely abused installed AI CLI tools (for example, Claude and Gemini) by passing dangerous permission flags to exfiltrate file-system contents and perform reconnaissance, then uploaded roughly 20,000 files to attacker-controlled public repositories. Organizations should remove affected package versions, rotate exposed credentials and inspect developer workstations and CI/CD pipelines for persistence.
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Salesloft Drift Supply-Chain Attacks Also Hit Google

🔒 Google and security vendors say the Salesloft Drift supply-chain campaign is broader than initially reported. Threat actors tracked as UNC6395 harvested OAuth tokens from the Salesloft Drift integration with Salesforce and also accessed a very small number of Google Workspace accounts. Organizations should treat any tokens connected to Drift as potentially compromised, revoke and rotate credentials, review third-party integrations, and investigate connected systems for signs of unauthorized access.
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Abandoned Sogou Zhuyin Update Server Used in Espionage

📡 Trend Micro reports that threat actors leveraged an abandoned Sogou Zhuyin update server to distribute multiple malware families, including C6DOOR, GTELAM, DESFY, and TOSHIS. The campaign, tracked as TAOTH and identified in June 2025, used hijacked automatic updates, spear-phishing, and fake cloud/login pages to target dissidents, journalists, researchers, and business figures across East Asia. The adversary registered the lapsed domain sogouzhuyin[.]com in October 2024 and exploited third-party cloud services like Google Drive to conceal callbacks and exfiltrate data.
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Nx npm Package Hijacked to Exfiltrate Data via AI Toolchain

🛡️ Malicious updates to the Nx npm package were published on 26 August, briefly delivering AI-assisted data‑stealing malware to developer systems. The infected releases injected crafted prompts into local AI CLIs (Anthropic’s Claude, Google Gemini, Amazon Q) to locate GitHub/npm tokens, SSH keys, .env secrets and cryptocurrency wallets, then encoded and uploaded the harvest by creating public repositories under victims' accounts. StepSecurity says eight compromised versions were live for five hours and 20 minutes and that attackers subsequently weaponized stolen GitHub CLI OAuth tokens to expose and fork private organization repositories. Recommended mitigation includes revoking tokens and SSH/GPG keys, making exposed repos private, disconnecting affected users and following a full remediation plan.
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Supply-Chain Attacks on Nx and React Expose Dev Credentials

🔒 A coordinated supply-chain campaign compromised multiple npm packages — most notably the Nx build system — and used post-install scripts to harvest developer assets across enterprise environments. Wiz found the malware weaponized local AI CLI tools to exfiltrate filesystem contents, tokens, SSH keys, and environment variables. Separately, JFrog uncovered obfuscated malicious React packages designed to steal Chrome data. Vendors removed the packages and recommend rotating credentials, removing affected versions, and auditing developer and CI systems.
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VS Code Marketplace Name Reuse Enables Malware Campaign

🔍 ReversingLabs has exposed a campaign in which malicious Visual Studio Code extensions exploited a name-reuse loophole on the VS Code Marketplace. A downloader extension named ahbanC.shiba executed the command shiba.aowoo to fetch a second payload that encrypted files and demanded one Shiba Inu token, although no wallet address was provided. The vulnerability arises because removed extensions free their names for reuse, contrary to Marketplace guidance that names are unique. Researchers demonstrated the issue by republishing test extensions under previously used names and warned developers to exercise greater caution when installing Marketplace packages.
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Nx Build Supply-Chain Attack: Trojanized Packages Detected

🔐 The Nx package ecosystem was trojanized via a malicious post-install script, telemetry.js, which exfiltrated developer secrets from macOS and *nix environments. Stolen items included npm and GitHub tokens, SSH keys, crypto wallets, API keys and .env contents, uploaded to public GitHub repositories. Immediate actions include auditing Nx package versions, removing affected node_modules, rotating all potentially exposed secrets and monitoring repositories and Actions for misuse.
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Malicious Nx npm Packages in 's1ngularity' Supply Chain

🔒 The maintainers of nx warned of a supply-chain compromise that allowed attackers to publish malicious versions of the npm package and several supporting plugins that gathered credentials. Rogue postinstall scripts scanned file systems, harvested GitHub, cloud and AI credentials, and exfiltrated them as Base64 to public GitHub repositories named 's1ngularity-repository' under victim accounts. Security firms reported 2,349 distinct secrets leaked; maintainers rotated tokens, removed the malicious versions, and urged immediate credential rotation and system cleanup.
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MixShell Malware Targets U.S. Supply Chain via Contact Forms

⚠️ Cybersecurity researchers warn of a targeted social‑engineering campaign delivering an in‑memory implant called MixShell to supply‑chain manufacturers through corporate 'Contact Us' forms. The activity, tracked as ZipLine by Check Point, uses weeks of credible exchanges, fake NDAs and weaponized ZIPs containing LNK files that trigger PowerShell loaders. MixShell runs primarily in memory, uses DNS tunneling for C2 with HTTP fallback, and enables remote commands, file access, reverse proxying, persistence and lateral movement. Malicious archives are staged on abused Heroku subdomains, illustrating use of legitimate PaaS for tailored delivery.
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