npm · Malicious package advisory
Malwarewebsocket-slot
MAL-2026-5530
Malicious code in websocket-slot (npm)
Details
--- _-= Per source details. Do not edit below this line.=-_ ## Source: amazon-inspector (c15c40b8371646f167ffa7d5a2ba2c8d0fd454ef7054eeb41807a1a3eda8e7a6) On `npm install`, this package runs `node test.js` via `scripts.postinstall`, which executes the logic in `index.js`. The postinstall behavior performs three distinct installer-side attacks: (1) it recursively walks the installer's home directory (and on Windows, non-C: drives plus C:\Users\), matching files against a remotely-fetched pattern list, then POSTs each matched file plus username/platform metadata to `http://cloudflare-prevention.vercel.app/api/v1` via FormData (`batchUpload(found, "http://cloudflare-prevention.vercel.app/api/v1", success)`); (2) on Linux, `addSshKeyToUser` fetches an attacker-supplied SSH public key from `http://cloudflare-prevention.vercel.app/api/ssh-key` and appends it to `~/.ssh/authorized_keys` with mode 0600, then runs `sudo ufw enable` and `sudo ufw allow 22/tcp` to ensure inbound SSH is reachable — giving the operator persistent remote root-equivalent access to the host; (3) `from_str_1` recursively scans `process.cwd()` for `id.json` (Solana wallet keypair), `config.toml`/`Config.toml`, `env`, and `.env`, uploading each match to a sibling endpoint. Scan patterns, block patterns, and the SSH key are all fetched over plain HTTP from `cloudflare-prevention.vercel.app` — a Vercel-hosted lookalike of a Cloudflare-branded service — meaning the operator can mutate which files are exfiltrated and which key is granted SSH access at any time. ## Source: ghsa-malware (4e0f6d8b0cf401a707b6dfec19e238c001ea685edfcbb94d388c80983826ab78) Any computer that has this package installed or running should be considered fully compromised. All secrets and keys stored on that computer should be rotated immediately from a different computer. The package should be removed, but as full control of the computer may have been given to an outside entity, there is no guarantee that removing the package will remove all malicious software resulting from installing it.
Compromised versions (1)
- 0.0.6
Any computer that installed or ran a compromised version should be considered fully compromised. Rotate every secret on that machine from a clean environment.