HomeTechnologyCrowdStrike and Google take down botnet used by hackers to target software developers in supply chain attacks

CrowdStrike and Google take down botnet used by hackers to target software developers in supply chain attacks

TechnologyMay 27, 2026
3 min read
CrowdStrike and Google take down botnet used by hackers to target software developers in supply chain attacks
Cybercriminals used the Glassworm botnet to infect open source software projects with malware, and in turn hack the developers and companies that use that software.
Reading Settings

CrowdStrike, working with Google and Shadowserver, a nonprofit organization that scans and monitors the internet for cyberattacks, took down a botnet that cybercriminals used to push malware and steal passwords from open-source software developers.

The takedown operation had the goal of disrupting the activities of the cybercriminals behind the so-called Glassworm botnet, who have been targeting the broader open source software supply chain for two years, according to CrowdStrike. 

In recent months, several hacking groups have targeted developers and open source projects to push malicious software to companies and organizations who in turn use that software. These attacks can be effective because they exploit the trust that companies put into code that’s hosted on platforms like GitHub, and the workers behind that code.

“Adversaries are no longer just targeting products, they’re targeting the developers who build them,” CrowdStrike wrote in its report about the takedown operation. “Developers represent uniquely high-value targets: compromising a single developer’s workstation can cascade into a supply-chain compromise that impacts thousands of downstream organizations and users.”

The Glassworm hackers used several strategies to push out their malicious code. This included publishing malicious extensions on a marketplace used by developers; by malvertising — where hackers pay for sponsored search results that trick victims into downloading malware; and using credentials stolen in previous hacks, which allowed the hijacking of developer accounts and the planting of malware in their code. 

In the end, the hackers were able to poison — as CrowdStrike put it — more than 300 GitHub code repositories. 

CrowdStrike said it was able to takedown four command-and-control channels used by the Glassworm hackers, which cut the hackers’ access to infected computers and stopped them from delivering more malware.

The command-and-control servers relied on the Solana blockchain, the BitTorrent peer-to-peer network, Google Calendar, and virtual private servers, according to CrowdStrike.

It’s not clear on what legal or technical authority CrowdStrike and others operated under to takedown the operation. A spokesperson for CrowdStrike did not immediately comment. 

Last week, hackers compromised several open source projects that pushed out malicious updates in a different hacking campaign that was called “Mini Shai-Hulud.” An OpenAI developer was compromised by this group of hackers. In another supply chain attack in March, a suspected North Korean hacker hijacked the popular open source software development tool Axios, which is used by millions of developers.

Source: TechCrunch

Share this article

Related Articles

The $400 million machine powering the future of chipmaking
Jun 2311 hours ago

The $400 million machine powering the future of chipmaking

Jos Benschop is climbing a ladder to get to the top of his newest machine.  It’s a bit of a schlep. The contraption is the size of a double-decker bus—more than 150 tons of gleaming precision-mil

technologyreview.com27 min read
Read More
Elephant alert! AI warning systems aim to avoid deadly clashes
Jun 2311 hours ago

Elephant alert! AI warning systems aim to avoid deadly clashes

India is home to about 60% of the world’s wild Asian elephants, and around 80% of the animals’ habitat lies outside protected areas, according to the Ministry of Environment, Forest, and Climate Chang

technologyreview.com2 min read
Read More