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Malware Spreads Through FishPig Distribution Server to Infect Magento-Powered Stores

 

For several weeks, Magento stores have been infected with malware as a result of a supply chain attack on the FishPig distribution server. FishPig specialises in Magento optimizations and Magento-WordPress integrations, and its Magento extensions have received over 200,000 downloads. FishPig issued a warning on Tuesday about an intrusion into its extension licence system that resulted in a threat actor injecting malicious PHP code into the Helper/License.php file. 

“This file is included in most FishPig extensions so it is best to assume that all FishPig modules had been infected,” FishPig announced.

The hackers likely had access to the company's servers since at least August 6, according to the company. As per Sansec security researchers who discovered the intrusion, the injected code would install another piece of malware called Rekoobe, which would hide as a background process on the compromised servers.

Sansec further told that the malicious code injected into License.php would download a Linux binary from license.fishpig.co.uk every time the Fishpig control panel is accessed in the Magento backend. The downloaded file, named 'lic.bin,' appears to be a licenced asset, but it is actually the Rekoobe remote access trojan.

The trojan removes all malicious files from the infected machine after execution, but it remains in memory, impersonating a system service while waiting for instructions from its command and control (C&C) server, according to the researchers. FishPig claims that the malicious code has been removed from its servers and that all modules have been updated.

“It is recommended to upgrade all FishPig modules or reinstall existing versions from the source, regardless of whether or not you are using extensions known to be infected. This will ensure clean and secure code on your system,” FishPig announced.

Google Rejecting All Cryptocurrency Mining Extensions Submitted To The Chrome Web Store

Google is taking action against all Chrome extensions that incorporate a cryptographic money mining segment and is banning them from the Chrome Web Store. Up until now, Google had permitted cryptocurrency mining extensions till mining was the extension's just reason, and clients were appropriately informed about this conduct, Google's Extensions Platform Product Manager James Wagner noted in a blog post on Monday .

While the organization has no issue listing extensions with a solitary reason for straightforwardly mining digital coins in the background rather, Google has an issue with the developers uploading and posting Chrome extensions promoting one particular functionality, and furthermore furtively mining digital coins in the background without the client's assent.

In the course of recent months, there has been an ascent in virulent extensions that seem to provide useful functionality at first glance, acknowledged Wagner and this happens he further adds, while the embedded and concealed cryptographic money mining scripts keep running in the background without the user's assent.

 These mining scripts often consume significant CPU resources and can severely impact system performance and power consumption.

"Unfortunately, approximately 90 per cent of all extensions with mining scripts that developers have attempted to upload to Chrome Web Store have failed to comply with the company’s policy, of adequately informing users about the full behaviour of a listed extension and have been either rejected or removed from the store," Wagner adds.

Nonetheless Google is further planning to delist every current extension that mines cryptocurrency in "late June" however extensions with "block chain-related purposes other than mining" are still permitted. The ban has nothing to do with ads running mining scripts in the background, yet rather the plans and schemes related with the "unregulated or speculative financial products.”