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Lazarus Strikes npm Again with New Wave of Malicious Packages
The Socket Research Team has discovered six new malicious npm packages linked to North Korea’s Lazarus Group, designed to steal credentials and deploy backdoors.
@wemnyelezxnpm/provident-quae-accusamus
Advanced tools
Stanford Javascript Crypto Library
Security Mail: sjcl@ovt.me
OpenPGP-Key Fingerprint: 0D54 3E52 87B4 EC06 3FA9 0115 72ED A6C7 7AAF 48ED
Keyserver: pool.sks-keyservers.net
codecBase32
has been re-enabled with changes to conform to RFC 4648:
=
is now applied to the output of fromBits
. If you don't want that padding, you can disable it by calling fromBits
with a second parameter of true
or anything that evaluates as "truthy" in JSsjcl.codec.base32
now matches that specified by the RFC, rather than the extended hex alphabet.sjcl.codec.base32hex
(also matching the RFC). So if you encoded something with base32
before, you'll want to decode it with base32hex
now.The documentation is available here
FAQs
sjcl ====
The npm package @wemnyelezxnpm/provident-quae-accusamus receives a total of 6 weekly downloads. As such, @wemnyelezxnpm/provident-quae-accusamus popularity was classified as not popular.
We found that @wemnyelezxnpm/provident-quae-accusamus demonstrated a healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released less than a year ago. It has 1 open source maintainer collaborating on the project.
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