North Korea’s hijack of one of the web’s most used open source projects was likely weeks in the making
A North Korean cyberattack that last Monday briefly hijacked one of the most widely used open source projects on the web took weeks to carry out as part of a long-running campaign to target the code’s top developers.
Jason Saayman, who maintains the popular Axios project that developers use to connect their apps to the internet, provided a postmortem with a timeline of the hack. He shared that the hackers began their targeting campaign around two weeks before eventually gaining control of his computer to push out malicious code. By posing as a real company, creating a realistic-looking Slack workspace, and using fake profiles of its employees to build credibility, Saayman said the suspected North Korean hackers then invited him into a web meeting that prompted him to download malware masquerading as an update necessary to access the call.
This attack, Saayman said, mimicked earlier hacks attributed to North Korea by security researchers at Google. After compromising and gaining remote access to Saayman’s computer, the hackers then released the malicious updates to the Axios project.
Saayman did not immediately respond to an email with questions about the incident.
The Kim Jong Un regime remains under international sanctions and banned from the global financial network for violating a ban on its nuclear weapons development program, which the country funds in large part by launching cyberattacks and stealing cryptocurrency
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