What You Need to Know About Why a recent supply-chain attack singled out secu...
The pushed malware scoured infected machines for repository tokens, SSH keys, and other credentials. It has been a bad six weeks for security firm Checkmarx. Over the past 40 days, it has been the victim of at least one supply-chain attack that delivered malware to customers on two separate occasions. Now it has been hit by a ransomware attack from prolific fame-seeking hackers. The streak of misfortunes started on March 19 with the supply-chain attack of Trivy, a widely used vulnerability scanner. The attackers behind the breach first breached the Trivy GitHub account and then used their access to push malware to Trivy users, one of which was Checkmarx.
Both a target and delivery mechanism
Or so Checkmarx thought.Read full article Comments Four days later, Checkmarx’s GitHub account was compromised and began pushing malware to the security firm’s users. The company contained and remediated the breach and replaced the malware with the legitimate apps.

Related Articles
- How to Lock In a Lifetime Plex Pass at the Current Price Before the July 2026 Hike
- How Apple Secured Animato's Avatar Technology: A Strategic How-To Guide
- Earn $100 Cash Bonus by Adding a Co-Owner to Your Apple Card
- Kagi's Orion for Linux Reaches Beta Milestone with v0.3 Release
- Unlock the Ultimate Mint Mobile Pixel 10 Deal: $300 Phone + Low-Cost Unlimited Plan – No Trade Required
- How to Optimize Your KDE Plasma 6.7 Experience: Remote Desktop & Notification Tricks
- Red Hat Summit 2026: Modernizing Platforms and Deploying AI at Scale with Microsoft Azure Red Hat OpenShift
- Navigating Leadership Changes: The Latest Executive Movements in Biopharma