Bitcoin is up 0.73% in the last 24 hours

Browse through the current market rates for various cryptocurrencies from your dashboard.

Bitmap Copy 3
Bitcoin

BTC

$90,669.47

-0.31% 1h

noun-5629767
Max Supply
21,000,000
noun-3235386
Circulating Supply
19,959,506
noun-7899443
Volume

24h

$57,186,322,860.80

21.60% 1h

Shape
Market Dominance
58.55%
Shape
Price Change 90D
-18.64%

Crypto Hackers are Now Using Ethereum Smart Contracts to Mask Malware Payloads

Ethereum has become the latest front for software supply chain attacks.

Researchers at ReversingLabs earlier this week uncovered two malicious NPM packages that used Ethereum smart contracts to conceal harmful code, allowing the malware to bypass traditional security checks.

NPM is a package manager for the runtime environment Node.js and is considered the world’s largest software registry, where developers can access and share code that contributes to millions of software programs.

The packages, “colortoolsv2” and “mimelib2,” were uploaded to the widely used Node Package Manager repository in July. They appeared to be simple utilities at first glance, but in practice, they tapped Ethereum’s blockchain to fetch hidden URLs that directed compromised systems to download second-stage malware.

By embedding these commands within a smart contract, attackers disguised their activity as legitimate blockchain traffic, making detection more difficult.

“This is something we haven’t seen previously,” ReversingLabs researcher Lucija Valentić said in their report. “It highlights the fast evolution of detection evasion strategies by malicious actors who are trolling open source repositories and developers.”

The technique builds on an old playbook. Past attacks have used trusted services like GitHub Gists, Google Drive, or OneDrive to host malicious links. By leveraging Ethereum smart contracts instead, attackers added a crypto-flavored twist to an already dangerous supply chain tactic.

The incident is part of a broader campaign. ReversingLabs discovered the packages tied to fake GitHub repositories that posed as cryptocurrency trading bots. These repos were padded with fabricated commits, bogus user accounts, and inflated star counts to look legitimate.

Developers who pulled the code risked importing malware without being aware of it.

Supply chain risks in open-source crypto tooling are not new. Last year, researchers flagged more than 20 malicious campaigns targeting developers through repositories such as npm and PyPI.

Many were aimed at stealing wallet credentials or installing crypto miners. But the use of Ethereum smart contracts as a delivery mechanism shows adversaries are adapting quickly to blend into blockchain ecosystems.

A takeaway for developers is that popular commits or active maintainers can be faked, and even seemingly innocuous packages may carry hidden payloads.

Related Posts

Robert Kiyosaki Says ‘Bye Bye US Dollar’—Warns Hyperinflation May Wipe You out

Robert Kiyosaki escalates his alarm over the weakening U.S. dollar and widening wealth pressures, urging Americans to brace...

Ripple CEO Targets Bitcoin $180K as Binance Chief Sees ‘Stronger’ BTC Ahead

Bitcoin’s projected climb gained fresh momentum as Ripple CEO Brad Garlinghouse and Binance CEO Richard Teng voiced bullish...

Bitcoin ETFs Rebound to Inflows as Ether Outflows Deepen

Bitcoin exchange-traded funds (ETFs) snapped back into positive territory with healthy inflows, while ether ETFs logged another day...

Join the Newsletter

noun-7811267

Strong AES 256-bit encryption

noun-7335232

Operating since 2023

noun-7776734

24/7 dedicated client care

Copyright © 2025 by Sable Venture Capital Inc. | All Rights Reserved