CRFeb 4, 2020

Towards Measuring Supply Chain Attacks on Package Managers for Interpreted Languages

arXiv:2002.01139v220 citations
AI Analysis

This addresses security risks for developers and end-users by identifying vulnerabilities in widely used package managers, though it is incremental as it builds on existing program analysis methods.

The paper tackles the problem of supply chain attacks on package managers for interpreted languages by proposing a comparative framework and applying program analysis techniques, resulting in the discovery of 339 new malicious packages, with 278 confirmed and some having over 100,000 downloads.

Package managers have become a vital part of the modern software development process. They allow developers to reuse third-party code, share their own code, minimize their codebase, and simplify the build process. However, recent reports showed that package managers have been abused by attackers to distribute malware, posing significant security risks to developers and end-users. For example, eslint-scope, a package with millions of weekly downloads in Npm, was compromised to steal credentials from developers. To understand the security gaps and the misplaced trust that make recent supply chain attacks possible, we propose a comparative framework to qualitatively assess the functional and security features of package managers for interpreted languages. Based on qualitative assessment, we apply well-known program analysis techniques such as metadata, static, and dynamic analysis to study registry abuse. Our initial efforts found 339 new malicious packages that we reported to the registries for removal. The package manager maintainers confirmed 278 (82%) from the 339 reported packages where three of them had more than 100,000 downloads. For these packages we were issued official CVE numbers to help expedite the removal of these packages from infected victims. We outline the challenges of tailoring program analysis tools to interpreted languages and release our pipeline as a reference point for the community to build on and help in securing the software supply chain.

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