North Korea Blamed For CyberLink Supply Chain Attacks
Legitimate app installer modified with malicious code
Malicious Code covers malware analysis, reported incidents, infrastructure, disruption efforts, and defensive guidance to reduce cyber risk.
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Background for this topic.
Malicious code is software, a script, or an altered program intended to perform unauthorized or harmful actions on a device or network. The term includes malware such as viruses, worms, trojans, spyware, and ransomware, as well as harmful macros or commands. Depending on its function, it may exploit a software weakness, execute with a user’s permissions, disrupt availability, or modify, destroy, or collect data.
Security teams should treat malicious code as both a prevention and detection concern: keep operating systems and applications patched, restrict unnecessary scripting and privileges, and use endpoint controls that identify unusual execution or persistence. Network and host telemetry can support investigation, while isolation and recovery from known-good backups can limit damage after execution. Analysis of samples and indicators can also guide threat intelligence and vulnerability-management priorities, but suspected code should be handled carefully to avoid executing it on production systems or exposing collected data.
Legitimate app installer modified with malicious code
A North Korean state-sponsored threat actor tracked as Diamond Sleet is distributing a trojanized version of a legitimate application developed by a Taiwanese multimedia software developer called CyberLink to target downstream customers via a supply chain attack
As organizations increasingly rely on AI-developed code, they must put guardrails in place to prevent major cybersecurity risks related to malicious code.