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Quasar RAT Disguised as an npm Package for Detecting Vulnerabilities in Ethereum Smart Contracts
Socket researchers uncover a malicious npm package posing as a tool for detecting vulnerabilities in Etherium smart contracts.
AssemblyLine 4 is an open source malware analysis framework. It leverages Kubernetes and Docker to adapt to many use cases; from a small appliance for supporting manual malware analysis and security teams to large-scale enterprise security operations scanning millions of files a day and providing triage capabilities.
AssemblyLine can be easily integrated in your environment using it’s powerful rest API and web interfaces. The platform comes with dozens of services to provide deep file analysis and enable integration with other security platforms such as anti-virus, malware-detonation sandboxes and threat knowledge bases. Best of all, with a little bit of Python code you can extend it yourself by creating new analysis and integration services.
This is Assemblyline 4 base repository. It provides Assemblyline with common libraries, cachestore, datastore, filestore, ODM and remote datatypes.
Assemblyline 4 will only work on systems running python3.11 and was only tested on linux systems.
If used outside of our normal container this library requires outside linux libraries.
Here is an example on how you would get those libraries on a Ubuntu 20.04+
system:
sudo add-apt-repository ppa:deadsnakes/ppa
sudo apt install libffi8 libfuzzy2 libmagic1 build-essential libffi-dev python3.11 python3.11-dev python3-pip libfuzzy-dev
FAQs
Assemblyline 4 - Automated malware analysis framework
We found that assemblyline demonstrated a healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released less than a year ago. It has 3 open source maintainers collaborating on the project.
Did you know?
Socket for GitHub automatically highlights issues in each pull request and monitors the health of all your open source dependencies. Discover the contents of your packages and block harmful activity before you install or update your dependencies.
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Socket researchers uncover a malicious npm package posing as a tool for detecting vulnerabilities in Etherium smart contracts.
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