Article Details
Scrape Timestamp (UTC): 2025-10-31 08:07:32.983
Source: https://thehackernews.com/2025/10/eclipse-foundation-revokes-leaked-open.html
Original Article Text
Click to Toggle View
Eclipse Foundation Revokes Leaked Open VSX Tokens Following Wiz Discovery. Eclipse Foundation, which maintains the open-source Open VSX project, said it has taken steps to revoke a small number of tokens that were leaked within Visual Studio Code (VS Code) extensions published in the marketplace. The action comes following a report from cloud security company Wiz earlier this month, which found several extensions from both Microsoft's VS Code Marketplace and Open VSX to have inadvertently exposed their access tokens within public repositories, potentially allowing bad actors to seize control and distribute malware, effectively poisoning the extension supply chain. "Upon investigation, we confirmed that a small number of tokens had been leaked and could potentially be abused to publish or modify extensions," Mikaël Barbero, head of security at the Eclipse Foundation, said in a statement. "These exposures were caused by developer mistakes, not a compromise of the Open VSX infrastructure." Open VSX said it has also introduced a token prefix format "ovsxp_" in collaboration with the Microsoft Security Response Center (MSRC) to make it easier to scan for exposed tokens across public repositories. Furthermore, the registry maintainers said they have identified and removed all extensions that were recently flagged by Koi Security as part of a campaign named "GlassWorm," while emphasizing that the malware distributed through the activity was not a "self-replicating worm" in that it first needs to steal developer credentials in order to extend its reach. "We also believe that the reported download count of 35,800 overstates the actual number of affected users, as it includes inflated downloads generated by bots and visibility-boosting tactics used by the threat actors," Barbero added. Open VSX said it's also in the process of enforcing a number of security changes to bolster the supply chain, including - The new measures to strengthen the ecosystem's cyber resilience come as the software supplier ecosystem and developers are increasingly becoming the target of attacks, allowing attackers far-reaching, persistent access to enterprise environments. "Incidents like this remind us that supply chain security is a shared responsibility: from publishers managing their tokens carefully, to registry maintainers improving detection and response capabilities," Barbero said.
Daily Brief Summary
The Eclipse Foundation revoked several leaked tokens from Visual Studio Code extensions, following a report by cloud security firm Wiz.
The leaked tokens, found in public repositories, could have allowed attackers to distribute malware and compromise the extension supply chain.
Investigations confirmed the leaks resulted from developer errors, not a breach of the Open VSX infrastructure.
A new token prefix format, "ovsxp_", has been introduced to facilitate easier detection of exposed tokens.
The foundation removed flagged extensions linked to the "GlassWorm" campaign, which required stolen developer credentials for malware distribution.
Download counts of affected extensions were inflated by bots, overstating the number of impacted users.
Enhanced security measures are being enforced to strengthen the ecosystem's resilience against supply chain attacks.
The incident underscores the importance of shared responsibility in maintaining supply chain security among publishers and registry maintainers.