Skip to content
  • Blog Home
  • Cyber Map
  • About Us – Contact
  • Disclaimer
  • Terms and Rules
  • Privacy Policy
Cyber Web Spider Blog – News

Cyber Web Spider Blog – News

Globe Threat Map provides a real-time, interactive 3D visualization of global cyber threats. Monitor DDoS attacks, malware, and hacking attempts with geo-located arcs on a rotating globe. Stay informed with live logs and archive stats.

  • Home
  • Cyber Map
  • Cyber Security News
  • Security Week News
  • The Hacker News
  • How To?
  • Toggle search form

North Korean Hackers Flood npm Registry with XORIndex Malware in Ongoing Attack Campaign

Posted on July 15, 2025July 15, 2025 By CWS

Jul 15, 2025Ravie LakshmananMalware / Net Safety
The North Korean risk actors linked to the Contagious Interview marketing campaign have been noticed publishing one other set of 67 malicious packages to the npm registry, underscoring ongoing makes an attempt to poison the open-source ecosystem through software program provide chain assaults.
The packages, per Socket, have attracted greater than 17,000 downloads, and incorporate a beforehand undocumented model of a malware loader codenamed XORIndex. The exercise is an enlargement of an assault wave noticed final month that concerned the distribution of 35 npm packages that deployed one other loader known as HexEval.

“The Contagious Interview operation continues to comply with a whack-a-mole dynamic, the place defenders detect and report malicious packages, and North Korean risk actors rapidly reply by importing new variants utilizing the identical, related, or barely developed playbooks,” Socket researcher Kirill Boychenko mentioned.
Contagious Interview is the identify assigned to a long-running marketing campaign that seeks to entice builders into downloading and executing an open-source mission as a part of a purported coding task. First publicly disclosed in late 2023, the risk cluster can be tracked as DeceptiveDevelopment, Well-known Chollima, Gwisin Gang, Tenacious Pungsan, UNC5342, and Void Dokkaebi.
The exercise is believed to be complementary to Pyongyang’s notorious distant data know-how (IT) employee scheme, adopting the technique of concentrating on builders already employed in firms of curiosity relatively than making use of for a job.

The assault chains utilizing malicious npm packages are pretty simple in that they function a conduit for a recognized JavaScript loader and stealer referred to as BeaverTail, which is subsequently used to extract knowledge from net browsers and cryptocurrency wallets, in addition to deploy a Python backdoor known as InvisibleFerret.
“The 2 campaigns now function in parallel. XORIndex has accrued over 9,000 downloads in a brief window (June to July 2025), whereas HexEval continues at a gradual tempo, with greater than 8,000 further downloads throughout the newly found packages,” Boychenko mentioned.
The XORIndex Loader, like HexEval, profiles the compromised machine and makes use of endpoints related to hard-coded command-and-control (C2) infrastructure to acquire the exterior IP deal with of the host. The collected data is then beaconed to a distant server, after which BeaverTail is launched.

Additional evaluation of those packages has uncovered a gradual evolution of the loader, progressing from a bare-bones prototype to a classy, stealthier malware. Early iterations have been discovered to lack in obfuscation and reconnaissance capabilities, whereas preserving their core performance intact, with second and third-generation variations introducing rudimentary system reconnaissance capabilities.
“Contagious Interview risk actors will proceed to diversify their malware portfolio, rotating by means of new npm maintainer aliases, reusing loaders similar to HexEval Loader and malware households like BeaverTail and InvisibleFerret, and actively deploying newly noticed variants together with XORIndex Loader,” Boychenko mentioned.

Discovered this text fascinating? Comply with us on Twitter  and LinkedIn to learn extra unique content material we submit.

The Hacker News Tags:Attack, Campaign, Flood, Hackers, Korean, Malware, North, NPM, Ongoing, Registry, XORIndex

Post navigation

Previous Post: MITRE Unveils AADAPT Framework to Tackle Cryptocurrency Threats 
Next Post: Ransomware Group Claims Attack on Belk

Related Posts

CISA Retires 10 Emergency Cybersecurity Directives Issued Between 2019 and 2024 The Hacker News
Meta to Train AI on E.U. User Data From May 27 Without Consent; Noyb Threatens Lawsuit The Hacker News
Malicious Browser Extensions Infect 722 Users Across Latin America Since Early 2025 The Hacker News
Hackers Exploit Critical CrushFTP Flaw to Gain Admin Access on Unpatched Servers The Hacker News
Scanning Activity on Palo Alto Networks Portals Jump 500% in One Day The Hacker News
A New Security Layer for macOS Takes Aim at Admin Errors Before Hackers Do The Hacker News

Categories

  • Cyber Security News
  • How To?
  • Security Week News
  • The Hacker News

Recent Posts

  • Hackers Infiltrated n8n’s Community Node Ecosystem With a Weaponized npm Package
  • Telegram Exposes Real Users IP Addresses, Bypassing Proxies on Android and iOS in 1-click
  • n8n Supply Chain Attack Abuses Community Nodes to Steal OAuth Tokens
  • Cyber Insights 2026: What CISOs Can Expect in 2026 and Beyond
  • InvisibleJS Emerges as Stealthy JavaScript Obfuscator Using Zero-Width Characters

Pages

  • About Us – Contact
  • Disclaimer
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Rules

Archives

  • January 2026
  • December 2025
  • November 2025
  • October 2025
  • September 2025
  • August 2025
  • July 2025
  • June 2025
  • May 2025

Recent Posts

  • Hackers Infiltrated n8n’s Community Node Ecosystem With a Weaponized npm Package
  • Telegram Exposes Real Users IP Addresses, Bypassing Proxies on Android and iOS in 1-click
  • n8n Supply Chain Attack Abuses Community Nodes to Steal OAuth Tokens
  • Cyber Insights 2026: What CISOs Can Expect in 2026 and Beyond
  • InvisibleJS Emerges as Stealthy JavaScript Obfuscator Using Zero-Width Characters

Pages

  • About Us – Contact
  • Disclaimer
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Rules

Categories

  • Cyber Security News
  • How To?
  • Security Week News
  • The Hacker News

Copyright © 2026 Cyber Web Spider Blog – News.

Powered by PressBook Masonry Dark