Supply Chain Security

North Korean Hackers Target High-Profile Node.js Maintainers

The threat actor behind the Axios supply chain attack has been aiming at other maintainers in its social engineering campaign.

The North Korean threat actor blamed for the Axios supply chain attack has been aiming its social engineering campaign at various Node.js maintainers, Socket reports.

The Axios attack occurred on March 31, when two malicious package versions were published to the NPM registry. They were removed roughly three hours later, but were likely installed by over 3 million users.

In a postmortem, Axios lead maintainer Jason Saayman explained that the hackers had infected his computer with a backdoor roughly two weeks before.

The attackers used social engineering tactics previously observed in the DeceptiveDevelopment, Operation Dream Job, Contagious Interview, and ClickFake Interview campaigns.

After inviting Saayman to a Slack workspace, the hackers scheduled a meeting on Microsoft Teams. When joining the meeting, the maintainer received an error message and was instructed to install a fake update that infected his system with the RAT.

UNC1069, the North Korean hacking group blamed for the Axios supply chain attack, is now using similar social engineering tactics in a campaign targeting multiple high-profile Node.js maintainers.

Advertisement. Scroll to continue reading.

The attacks were aimed at Socket CEO Feross Aboukhadijeh, several Socket engineers, Node Package Maintenance Working Group member Wes Todd, Platformatic co-founder and CTO Matteo Collina, Dotenv creator Scott Motte, Node.js Security Working Group contributor Ulises Gascón, and others.

The targeted individuals, Socket explains, maintain hundreds of NPM packages that have billions of downloads. All reported a similar social engineering attack as Saayman.

The campaign was likely mounted over the course of several weeks, with great attention to detail, to make the lures as convincing as possible. The attackers built seemingly legitimate meeting infrastructure and established trust before tricking the intended victims into executing malware.

“The operation takes weeks to execute and is deliberately designed to feel unremarkable. Attackers build rapport over time, schedule calls in advance and reschedule them, and conduct themselves with the professionalism of a legitimate business contact,” Socket notes.

In February, Google warned that UNC1069 had been using the same tactics in attacks targeting DeFi companies, cryptocurrency entities, and venture capital firms.

“I strongly recommend that the OSS maintainer community takes this very seriously. The specific personas and channels used for this attack are being investigated and taken down. But there are more. So many more. Report them. Talk about them. Share them. This is not your typical phishing,” security researcher Tay commented in the Axios postmortem thread.

Related: North Korean Hackers Drain $285 Million From Drift in 10 Seconds

Related: Polyfill Supply Chain Attack Impacting 100k Sites Linked to North Korea

Related: TeamPCP Moves From OSS to AWS Environments

Related: New ‘Sandworm_Mode’ Supply Chain Attack Hits NPM

Related Content

Malware & Threats

The most recent variants of the self-propagating attacks are named Miasma and Hades.

Supply Chain Security

Hackers published 96 malicious package versions, injected with a credential-stealing worm similar to Mini Shai-Hulud.

Artificial Intelligence

Malicious repositories and disguised symlinks can trick AI coding agents into silently installing attacker-controlled MCP servers capable of stealing secrets, compromising CI pipelines, and...

Supply Chain Security

Published within a 15-minute window, the malicious tags introduced backdoors to exfiltrate CI secrets.

Application Security

Fake automated commits injected GitHub Actions workflows containing payloads to steal credentials, CI secrets, keys, and tokens.

Data Breaches

Hackers accessed Grafana’s GitHub repositories after a token compromised in the TanStack attack was not rotated.

Malware & Threats

A compromised maintainer account was used to publish malicious package versions across the @antv namespace.

Artificial Intelligence

Two employee devices were compromised in the attack, and credential material was stolen from OpenAI code repositories.

Copyright © 2026 SecurityWeek ®, a Wired Business Media Publication. All Rights Reserved.

Exit mobile version