Open VSX Supply Chain Attack Used Compromised Dev Account to Spread GlassWorm

Cybersecurity researchers have disclosed details of a supply chain attack targeting the Open VSX Registry in which unidentified threat actors compromised a legitimate developer’s resources to push malicious updates to downstream users. “On January 30, 2026, four established Open VSX extensions published by the oorzc author had malicious versions published to Open VSX that embed the GlassWorm
[[{“value”:”

Cybersecurity researchers have disclosed details of a supply chain attack targeting the Open VSX Registry in which unidentified threat actors compromised a legitimate developer’s resources to push malicious updates to downstream users.

“On January 30, 2026, four established Open VSX extensions published by the oorzc author had malicious versions published to Open VSX that embed the GlassWorm malware loader,” Socket security researcher Kirill Boychenko said in a Saturday report.

“These extensions had previously been presented as legitimate developer utilities (some first published more than two years ago) and collectively accumulated over 22,000 Open VSX downloads prior to the malicious releases.”

The supply chain security company said that the supply chain attack involved the compromise of the developer’s publishing credentials, with the Open VSX security team assessing the incident as involving the use of either a leaked token or other unauthorized access. The malicious versions have since been removed from the Open VSX.

Cybersecurity

The list of identified extensions is below –

  • FTP/SFTP/SSH Sync Tool (oorzc.ssh-tools — version 0.5.1)
  • I18n Tools (oorzc.i18n-tools-plus — version 1.6.8)
  • vscode mindmap (oorzc.mind-map — version 1.0.61)
  • scss to css (oorzc.scss-to-css-compile — version 1.3.4)

The poisoned versions, Socket noted, are designed to deliver a loader malware associated with a known campaign called GlassWorm. The loader is equipped to decrypt and run embedded at runtime, uses an increasingly weaponized technique called EtherHiding to fetch command-and-control (C2) endpoints, and ultimately run code designed to steal Apple macOS credentials and cryptocurrency wallet data.

At the same time, the malware is detonated only after the compromised machine has been profiled, and it has been determined that it does not correspond to a Russian locale, a pattern commonly observed in malicious programs originating from or affiliated with Russian-speaking threat actors to avoid domestic prosecution.

The kinds of information harvested by the malware include –

  • Data from Mozilla Firefox and Chromium-based browsers (logins, cookies, internet history, and wallet extensions like MetaMask)
  • Cryptocurrency wallet files (Electrum, Exodus, Atomic, Ledger Live, Trezor Suite, Binance, and TonKeeper)
  • iCloud Keychain database
  • Safari cookies
  • Data from Apple Notes
  • user documents from Desktop, Documents, and Downloads folders
  • FortiClient VPN configuration files
  • Developer credentials (e.g., ~/.aws and ~/.ssh)

The targeting of developer information poses severe risks as it exposes enterprise environments to potential cloud account compromise and lateral movement attacks.

Cybersecurity

“The payload includes routines to locate and extract authentication material used in common workflows, including inspecting npm configuration for _authToken and referencing GitHub authentication artifacts, which can provide access to private repositories, CI secrets, and release automation,” Boychenko said.

A significant aspect of the attack is that it diverges from previously observed GlassWorm indicators in that it makes use of a compromised account belonging to a legitimate developer to distribute the malware. In prior instances, the threat actors behind the campaign have leveraged typosquatting and brandjacking to upload fraudulent extensions for subsequent propagation.

“The threat actor blends into normal developer workflows, hides execution behind encrypted, runtime-decrypted loaders, and uses Solana memos as a dynamic dead drop to rotate staging infrastructure without republishing extensions,” Socket said. “These design choices reduce the value of static indicators and shift defender advantage toward behavioral detection and rapid response.”

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

Iran-Linked RedKitten Cyber Campaign Targets Human Rights NGOs and Activists

Next Post

eScan Antivirus Update Servers Compromised to Deliver Multi-Stage Malware

Related Posts

Android Malware FvncBot, SeedSnatcher, and ClayRat Gain Stronger Data Theft Features

Cybersecurity researchers have disclosed details of two new Android malware families dubbed FvncBot and SeedSnatcher, as another upgraded version of ClayRat has been spotted in the wild. The findings come from Intel 471, CYFIRMA, and Zimperium, respectively. FvncBot, which masquerades as a security app developed by mBank, targets mobile banking users in Poland. What's notable about the malware
Read More

Critical WordPress Modular DS Plugin Flaw Actively Exploited to Gain Admin Access

A maximum-severity security flaw in a WordPress plugin called Modular DS has come under active exploitation in the wild, according to Patchstack. The vulnerability, tracked as CVE-2026-23550 (CVSS score: 10.0), has been described as a case of unauthenticated privilege escalation impacting all versions of the plugin prior to and including 2.5.1. It has been patched in version 2.5.2. The plugin
Read More

China-Aligned Threat Group Uses Windows Group Policy to Deploy Espionage Malware

A previously undocumented China-aligned threat cluster dubbed LongNosedGoblin has been attributed to a series of cyber attacks targeting governmental entities in Southeast Asia and Japan. The end goal of these attacks is cyber espionage, Slovak cybersecurity company ESET said in a report published today. The threat activity cluster has been assessed to be active since at least September 2023. "
Read More