Group that pulled off successful attack on PyPI has humble origins.
The official software repository for the Python language, Python Package Index (PyPI), has been targeted in a complex supply chain attack that appears to have successfully poisoned at least two legitimate projects with credential-stealing malware, researchers said on Thursday.
PyPI officials said last week that project contributors were under a phishing attack that attempted to trick them into divulging their account login credentials. When successful, the phishers used the compromised credentials to publish malware that posed as the latest release for legitimate projects associated with the account. PyPI quickly took down the compromised updates and urged all contributors to use phishing-resistant forms of two-factor authentication to protect their accounts better.
On Thursday, researchers from security firms SentinelOne and Checkmarx said that the supply chain attacks were part of a larger campaign by a group that has been active since at least late last year to spread credential-stealing malware the researchers are dubbing JuiceStealer. Initially, JuiceStealer was spread through a technique known as typosquatting, in which the threat actors seeded PyPI with hundreds of packages that closely resembled the names of well-established ones, in the hopes that some users would accidentally install them.
JuiceStealer was discovered on VirusTotal in February when someone, possibly the threat actor, submitted a Python app that surreptitiously installed the malware. JuiceStealer is developed using the .Net programming framework. It searches for passwords stored by Google Chrome. Based on information gleaned from the code, the researchers have linked the malware to activity that began in late 2021 and has evolved since then. One likely connection is to Nowblox, a scam website that purported to offer free Robux, the online currency for the game Roblox.
Over time, the threat actor, which the researchers are calling JuiceLedger, started using crypto-themed fraudulent applications such as the Tesla Trading bot, which was delivered in zip files accompanying additional legitimate software.
"JuiceLedger appears to have evolved very quickly from opportunistic, small-scale infections only a few months ago to conducting a supply chain attack on a major software distributor," the researchers wrote in a post. "The escalation in complexity in the attack on PyPI contributors, involving a targeted phishing campaign, hundreds of typosquatted packages and account takeovers of trusted developers, indicates that the threat actor has time and resources at their disposal."
PyPI has begun offering contributors free hardware-based keys for use in providing a second, unphishable factor of authentication. All contributors should switch to this stronger form of 2FA immediately. People downloading packages from PyPI—or any other open source repository—should take extra care to ensure the software they're downloading is legitimate.
Source: Ars Technica
- aum and Karlston
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