News: 0177335365

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Hundreds of E-Commerce Sites Hacked In Supply-Chain Attack (arstechnica.com)

(Monday May 05, 2025 @05:30PM (BeauHD) from the six-years-in-the-making dept.)


An anonymous reader quotes a report from Ars Technica:

> Hundreds of e-commerce sites, at least one owned by a large multinational company, were [1]backdoored by malware that executes malicious code inside the browsers of visitors , where it can steal payment card information and other sensitive data, security researchers said Monday. The infections are the result of a supply-chain attack that compromised at least three software providers with malware that remained dormant for six years and became active only in the last few weeks. At least 500 e-commerce sites that rely on the backdoored software were infected, and it's possible that the true number is double that, researchers from security firm Sansec [2]said . Among the compromised customers was a $40 billion multinational company, which Sansec didn't name. In an email Monday, a Sansec representative said that "global remediation [on the infected customers] remains limited."

>

> "Since the backdoor allows uploading and executing arbitrary PHP code, the attackers have full remote code execution (RCE) and can do essentially anything they want," the representative wrote. "In nearly all Adobe Commerce/Magento breaches we observe, the backdoor is then used to inject skimming software that runs in the user's browser and steals payment information (Magecart)." The three software suppliers identified by Sansec were Tigren, Magesolution (MGS), and Meetanshi. All three supply software that's based on [3]Magento , an open source e-commerce platform used by thousands of online stores. A software version sold by a fourth provider named Weltpixel has been infected with similar code on some of its customers' stores, but Sansec so far has been unable to confirm whether it was the stores or Weltpixel that were hacked. Adobe has owned Megento since 2018.



[1] https://arstechnica.com/security/2025/05/hundreds-of-e-commerce-sites-hacked-in-supply-chain-attack/

[2] https://sansec.io/research/license-backdoor

[3] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Magento



"Why reinvent the wheel" They asked Zog (Score:2)

by euxneks ( 516538 )

"This why", replied Zog, gesturing vaguely

So much for (Score:4, Informative)

by Virtucon ( 127420 )

Herd immunity. You'll all get hit if it's something that has never been seen before in the wild.

This is why I'm using virtual cards more and more for shopping online. Why? because e-commerce can be no safer than carrying your wallet, full of cash, in a dark alley at night.

I remember... (Score:2)

by NewtonsLaw ( 409638 )

I fondly recall the days when you could disable Javascript in your browser and the internet still worked. Since this is likely a Javascript-based exploit triggered by PHP code on the server then turning off Javascript would be a great mitigation -- but even if you could find a browser that allowed you to disable JS, it would instantly fail to render every website you visited.

Ah... the good old days of static HTML Yippee!

Turtles all the way down. (Score:3)

by Gravis Zero ( 934156 )

> People's Supply-Chains Attack Them Due to Supply-Chain Attack By People on Chain of Suppliers

This could have your headline Slashdot but you missed it!

Nothing so needs reforming as other people's habits.
-- Mark Twain