Microsoftâs open source tools were hacked to steal passwords of AI developers
Microsoft has cut off access to dozens of its open-source projects hosted on GitHub as it investigates how hackers apparently breached the projects and injected
Microsoft has cut off access to dozens of its open-source projects hosted on GitHub as it investigates how hackers apparently breached the projects and injected password-stealing malware into the code. Many of the affected projects relate to Microsoftâs cloud service Azure and other tools used by developers to code with AI development apps, such as Claude Code, Geminiâs command line interface, and VS Code. According to security firm Cloudsmith and community-driven malware analysis site OpenSourceMalware, who were some of the first to flag the hack, the malware allowed the hackers to steal the userâs passwords and other sensitive credentials when they opened the compromised tools in their AI coding apps.
Itâs not immediately known how many people have downloaded the affected tools. Microsoft confirmed it pulled the repos, as first reported by 404 Media. A Microsoft spokesperson acknowledged receipt of our email, but did not immediately comment. At least 70 projects belonging to Microsoft have been âdisabled,â per a message loading when trying to access the projectsâ pages on GitHub, a code-hosting site that Microsoft owns. âAccess to this repository has been disabled by GitHub Staff due to a violation of GitHubâs terms of service.â Image Credits:TechCrunch / This is the latest example in recent months of hackers breaching widely popular open-source projects with the aim of planting malware on a large number of users who have the code installed on their computers.
These hacks are known as âsupply chainâ attacks as they target code that is often used in a large number of software products, or by a specific kind of user, which may be advantageous to hack as they sometimes have access to cloud systems and large amounts of customersâ data. While itâs not uncommon for sole developers of open source projects to be targeted by hackers â in some cases as part of long-running efforts to gain the trust of the developer â it is rare for large tech giants like Microsoft, which have the resources to defend against these kinds of attacks, to get breached..
This is Microsoftâs second known breach over the past few weeks that has allowed hackers to compromise its open-source projects, per Ars Technica. In mid-May, security researchers said that Microsoftâs open source project Durable Task, a tool that helps developers build apps, was hacked. OpenSourceMalware said that Microsoftâs latest incident is a âre-compromiseâ of the Durable Task project, suggesting that Microsoft may not have eradicated the hackers on its first attempt or an entirely new, distinct breach.
