Researchers have uncovered a supply-chain attack that hides in Python packages, propagates like a worm, and tricks LLM-based ...
Threat actors have struck the software supply chain yet again, this time hitting the Python Package Index (PyPI) with Mini Shai-Hulud in an attempt to spread poisoned code. In the latest campaign, ...
TrapDoor spread 34 malicious packages across npm, PyPI, and Crates.io, stealing developer credentials and enabling persistence.
TanStack had 2FA, OIDC publishing, and Sigstore provenance on every release. The Mini Shai-Hulud worm published 84 malicious versions anyway. The CI/CD Trust-Chain Audit Grid maps the six gaps it ...
I ditched my terminal for Claude's built-in code executor, and I'm not going back.
A coordinated malware campaign known as TrapDoor has hit software ecosystems widely used by crypto and blockchain developers.
North Korea-linked hackers have upgraded the InvisibleFerret malware to bypass script-based security tools, converting its Python code into compiled modules that are harder for defenders to inspect ...
TeamPCP, the threat actor behind the recentsupply chain attack spree, has been linked to the compromise of the npm and PyPI packages from TanStack, UiPath, Mistral AI, OpenSearch, and Guardrails AI as ...
Hackers compromised 19 packages on the PyPI, collectively downloaded hundreds of thousands of times, in a new Shai-Hulud ...