Eclipse Foundation Revokes Leaked Open VSX Tokens Following Wiz Discovery

Eclipse Foundation, which maintains the open-source Open VSX project, said it has taken steps to revoke a small number of tokens that were leaked within Visual Studio Code (VS Code) extensions published in the marketplace. The action comes following a report from cloud security company Wiz earlier this month, which found several extensions from both Microsoft’s VS Code Marketplace and Open VSX
[[{“value”:”

Open VSX Tokens

Eclipse Foundation, which maintains the open-source Open VSX project, said it has taken steps to revoke a small number of tokens that were leaked within Visual Studio Code (VS Code) extensions published in the marketplace.

The action comes following a report from cloud security company Wiz earlier this month, which found several extensions from both Microsoft’s VS Code Marketplace and Open VSX to have inadvertently exposed their access tokens within public repositories, potentially allowing bad actors to seize control and distribute malware, effectively poisoning the extension supply chain.

“Upon investigation, we confirmed that a small number of tokens had been leaked and could potentially be abused to publish or modify extensions,” Mikaël Barbero, head of security at the Eclipse Foundation, said in a statement. “These exposures were caused by developer mistakes, not a compromise of the Open VSX infrastructure.”

Open VSX said it has also introduced a token prefix format “ovsxp_” in collaboration with the Microsoft Security Response Center (MSRC) to make it easier to scan for exposed tokens across public repositories.

DFIR Retainer Services

Furthermore, the registry maintainers said they have identified and removed all extensions that were recently flagged by Koi Security as part of a campaign named “GlassWorm,” while emphasizing that the malware distributed through the activity was not a “self-replicating worm” in that it first needs to steal developer credentials in order to extend its reach.

“We also believe that the reported download count of 35,800 overstates the actual number of affected users, as it includes inflated downloads generated by bots and visibility-boosting tactics used by the threat actors,” Barbero added.

Open VSX said it’s also in the process of enforcing a number of security changes to bolster the supply chain, including –

  • Reducing the token lifetime limits by default to reduce the impact of accidental leaks
  • Making token revocation easier upon notification
  • Automated scanning of extensions at the time of publication to check for malicious code patterns or embedded secrets

The new measures to strengthen the ecosystem’s cyber resilience come as the software supplier ecosystem and developers are increasingly becoming the target of attacks, allowing attackers far-reaching, persistent access to enterprise environments.

“Incidents like this remind us that supply chain security is a shared responsibility: from publishers managing their tokens carefully, to registry maintainers improving detection and response capabilities,” Barbero said.

Found this article interesting? Follow us on Google News, Twitter and LinkedIn to read more exclusive content we post.

“}]] The Hacker News 

Total
0
Shares
Previous Post

CISA Flags VMware Zero-Day Exploited by China-Linked Hackers in Active Attacks

Next Post

CISA and NSA Issue Urgent Guidance to Secure WSUS and Microsoft Exchange Servers

Related Posts

ShadowPad Malware Actively Exploits WSUS Vulnerability for Full System Access

A recently patched security flaw in Microsoft Windows Server Update Services (WSUS) has been exploited by threat actors to distribute malware known as ShadowPad. "The attacker targeted Windows Servers with WSUS enabled, exploiting CVE-2025-59287 for initial access," AhnLab Security Intelligence Center (ASEC) said in a report published last week. "They then used PowerCat, an open-source
Read More

EdgeStepper Implant Reroutes DNS Queries to Deploy Malware via Hijacked Software Updates

The threat actor known as PlushDaemon has been observed using a previously undocumented Go-based network backdoor codenamed EdgeStepper to facilitate adversary-in-the-middle (AitM) attacks. EdgeStepper "redirects all DNS queries to an external, malicious hijacking node, effectively rerouting the traffic from legitimate infrastructure used for software updates to attacker-controlled infrastructure
Read More

WatchGuard Warns of Active Exploitation of Critical Fireware OS VPN Vulnerability

WatchGuard has released fixes to address a critical security flaw in Fireware OS that it said has been exploited in real-world attacks. Tracked as CVE-2025-14733 (CVSS score: 9.3), the vulnerability has been described as a case of out-of-bounds write affecting the iked process that could allow a remote unauthenticated attacker to execute arbitrary code. "This vulnerability affects both the
Read More