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// #supply-chain

43 articles — page 2 of 2

💻 AppSec

108 Malicious Chrome Extensions Exfiltrating Browser Data Removed from Web Store

Google has removed 108 extensions from the Chrome Web Store after researchers identified a coordinated malicious extension campaign conducting browser credential harvesting, session cookie theft, and clipboard monitoring across millions of installations. The extensions impersonated productivity tools, ad blockers, and security tools — with some active for over 18 months before detection. Enterprise Chrome deployments should audit installed extensions against the published IOC list.

#chrome-extensions +6
💻 AppSec

PyTorch Lightning PyPI Package Compromised — Credential-Stealing Payload Delivered to AI/ML Development Environments

PyTorch Lightning versions 2.6.2 and 2.6.3 on PyPI were found to contain a credential-stealing postinstall payload, extending the Mini Shai-Hulud supply chain campaign that previously compromised SAP's official npm packages. Organisations running AI/ML workloads should audit Python environments and rotate any credentials stored on affected development or CI/CD systems.

#supply-chain +6
🗄️ Assets

Trellix Confirms Source Code Repository Breach — Forensic Investigation Underway

Cybersecurity vendor Trellix has confirmed unauthorised access to an internal source code repository, with law enforcement notified and a forensic investigation ongoing. The breach raises concerns about potential weaponisation of security product internals against Trellix's enterprise customer base.

#data-breach +4
🗄️ Assets

DPRK Scales npm Malware Campaign With AI-Generated Code, Fake Tech Firms, and Remote RAT Deployment

North Korean threat actors have launched a new wave of npm supply chain attacks using AI-generated malicious package code that bypasses static analysis tools, fake software development firms as cover identities, and a multi-stage RAT that exfiltrates source code, cryptographic keys, and credentials from developer workstations. The campaign targets blockchain, DeFi, and fintech developers — organisations in these sectors should audit npm dependencies and developer machine security.

#dprk +7
💻 AppSec

Official SAP npm Packages Compromised to Steal Enterprise Developer Credentials

Threat actors compromised official SAP npm packages to insert credential-harvesting code targeting enterprise developers working on SAP integration projects. The malicious packages exfiltrate environment variables, SSH keys, and cloud credentials from developer workstations. Enterprise teams using SAP npm packages in their CI/CD pipelines should audit package integrity and rotate potentially exposed credentials.

#sap +5
⚖️ Risk Mgmt

WordPress Redirect Plugin Carried Dormant Backdoor for Three Years Before Activation

Researchers have uncovered a dormant backdoor in a widely-installed WordPress redirect management plugin that remained inactive for approximately three years before being activated by the attackers. The backdoor, present across an estimated 200,000+ active installations, highlights the long-game threat of supply chain compromise in the WordPress plugin ecosystem and the limits of periodic security scanning.

#wordpress +5
💻 AppSec

DPRK's Sapphire Sleet Backdoors Axios npm Package: 100 Million Weekly Downloads at Risk

North Korea's Sapphire Sleet compromised an axios npm maintainer account on March 31, publishing backdoored versions 1.14.1 and 0.30.4 that delivered a cross-platform RAT during a three-hour exposure window. Axios has approximately 100 million weekly downloads. CISA issued Advisory AA26-110A on April 20 — organisations that ran npm installs during the window should treat their CI/CD pipeline as compromised and rotate all secrets immediately.

#supply-chain +6
💻 AppSec

CanisterSprawl: Self-Propagating npm Worm Steals Developer Credentials and Re-Infects Package Ecosystems

Researchers discovered CanisterSprawl, a self-propagating npm supply chain worm attributed to TeamPCP that compromised at least 16 packages including pgserve and @automagik/genie. A postinstall hook harvests npm tokens, cloud credentials, SSH keys, and AI tool configs, exfiltrating to a blockchain canister before using stolen tokens to inject the worm into every other package owned by the compromised developer. Organisations should audit postinstall scripts and rotate all credentials from affected development environments.

#supply-chain +6
💻 AppSec

TeamPCP Supply Chain Campaign Expands to npm and Docker Hub — Bitwarden CLI and Checkmarx KICS Both Backdoored

The TeamPCP supply chain threat group has extended its campaign beyond GitHub Actions and PyPI to poison the @bitwarden/cli npm package and overwrite Checkmarx KICS Docker images and VS Code extensions. The campaign now spans four developer distribution channels across six weeks, deploying a self-propagating worm that exfiltrates SSH keys, cloud credentials, and MCP configuration files from compromised developer environments.

#supply-chain +7
💻 AppSec

Vercel Confirms Breach via Compromised AI Tool — Developer Environment Variables and Credentials Exposed

Cloud deployment platform Vercel has confirmed a breach traced to a Lumma infostealer infection at Context.ai, a third-party AI tool used by a Vercel employee. Attackers used the stolen Google Workspace OAuth access to reach Vercel's internal environments, exposing environment variables and a limited set of customer credentials. ShinyHunters is claiming responsibility and demanding $2 million for the stolen data.

#vercel +9
⚖️ Risk Mgmt

ShinyHunters Leaks 78.6M Rockstar Records — The Real Story Is Anodot's Access

ShinyHunters has released 78.6 million records stolen from Rockstar Games, following the company's refusal to pay a ransom by the April 14 deadline. The breach did not involve Rockstar's own systems: attackers compromised Anodot, a third-party SaaS analytics vendor with direct access to Rockstar's Snowflake data warehouse. No player records were exposed, but the incident illustrates the persistent enterprise risk of SaaS vendor data access.

#third-party-risk +8
🛡️ SecOps

North Korea's UNC4736 Spent Six Months Infiltrating Drift Protocol Before Stealing $285 Million

North Korean state hackers (UNC4736/AppleJeus) executed a meticulously planned six-month social engineering operation against Drift Protocol, culminating in a $285 million theft from the Solana DeFi platform on 1 April 2026. The attack leveraged fabricated tokens and pre-signed transactions to hand attackers admin control — the largest DeFi exploit of 2026 and the second-largest in Solana's history.

#north-korea +7
💻 AppSec

DPRK's Contagious Interview Campaign Spreads 1,700+ Malicious Packages Across Five Ecosystems

North Korea's UNC1069 (BlueNoroff) threat group has expanded its Contagious Interview supply chain operation to five package registries — npm, PyPI, Go Modules, crates.io, and Packagist — publishing more than 1,700 malicious packages that deliver a cross-platform infostealer and RAT. The operation is the largest coordinated open-source supply chain attack attributed to a nation-state actor.

#north-korea +13
🗄️ Assets

ShinyHunters Breach Anodot SaaS Integrator, Steal Snowflake Customer Data via Harvested Tokens

The ShinyHunters threat group breached Anodot, an AI analytics platform used to integrate with Snowflake cloud data warehouses, and stole authentication tokens that enabled downstream data theft from over a dozen Snowflake customer environments. The attack is a textbook fourth-party risk incident: the direct target was not the victim organisations' systems but a trusted third-party integration layer.

#snowflake +8
💻 AppSec

Smart Slider 3 Pro Update Infrastructure Compromised — Backdoored Plugin Pushed to 800,000 Sites

Attackers breached Nextend's update servers and distributed a fully weaponised backdoor through the official Smart Slider 3 Pro update channel, affecting WordPress and Joomla sites that auto-updated between 7–8 April 2026. The compromised version 3.5.1.35 creates rogue admin accounts, drops persistent remote access tools, and exfiltrates credentials — all delivered through the trusted plugin update mechanism.

#wordpress +9
💻 AppSec

CVSS 10.0 Flowise RCE Actively Exploited Across 12,000 Exposed Instances

CVE-2025-59528, a maximum-severity remote code execution vulnerability in the Flowise AI workflow platform, is being actively exploited in the wild. Over 12,000 internet-exposed instances remain unpatched, allowing attackers to execute arbitrary JavaScript on host machines and extract API keys, credentials, and configuration secrets.

#rce +6
💻 AppSec

TeamPCP Backdoors LiteLLM on PyPI — AI Gateway Package With 3 Million Daily Downloads Compromised

The LiteLLM Python package — a widely-deployed AI gateway library with three million daily downloads — was backdoored on PyPI on 24 March by threat actor TeamPCP. Malicious versions 1.82.7 and 1.82.8 deployed a three-stage payload stealing cloud credentials, Kubernetes secrets, and CI/CD tokens from any system that installed the package during a 40-minute window.

#supply-chain +8
💻 AppSec

Trivy Security Scanner Hijacked — 75 GitHub Action Tags Redirected to Credential Stealer

The widely-used Aqua Security Trivy vulnerability scanner was compromised in a supply chain attack that replaced 75 version tags in the official trivy-action and setup-trivy GitHub Actions with credential-stealing malware. Threat actor TeamPCP leveraged non-atomic secret rotation to retain access after an initial February compromise, launching a second attack wave on 19 March. Any CI/CD pipeline that ran trivy-action or setup-trivy during the compromise window may have had cloud credentials, API tokens, and SSH keys exfiltrated.

#trivy +8
🛡️ SecOps

DarkSword Apple Exploit Chain Adds Three CVEs to CISA KEV — Federal Deadline April 3

CISA has added three vulnerabilities from the DarkSword iOS/macOS exploit chain to its Known Exploited Vulnerabilities catalogue, mandating federal agencies patch all Apple devices by 3 April. DarkSword is a multi-stage attack framework linking six chained vulnerabilities to achieve full kernel compromise across iOS, iPadOS, macOS, watchOS, and tvOS — with no user interaction required beyond visiting a malicious webpage.

#apple +11