Cryptopolitan
2026-05-14 14:14:44

OpenAI says no user data exposed after TanStack npm supply chain attack hit employee devices

OpenAI has admitted that two employee devices were compromised through malicious versions of TanStack npm packages. The company is insisting that no evidence that user data, production systems, or intellectual property were tampered with was found. Was OpenAI hacked? OpenAI has confirmed that malicious actors breached two of its employee devices as part of a massive software supply chain campaign called “Mini Shai-Hulud.” OpenAI previously deployed controls to limit supply chain attack exposure after an incident with Axios, but the two affected employee devices had not yet received the updated configurations that would have blocked the malicious package download. The attack targeted TanStack , an open-source library used by millions of developers. The attackers published 84 malicious versions across 42 npm packages, including the popular @tanstack/react-router, which is downloaded over 12 million times weekly. An external researcher working for StepSecurity detected the malicious packages within roughly 20 minutes of publication and notified npm security directly. This attack exploited the trust users have in automated build systems. The malicious code was published using TanStack’s own legitimate publishing keys, making it look like an official update. Mini Shai-Hulud is a self reproducing malware that steals credentials like GitHub tokens, cloud keys, and SSH keys once a developer or CI/CD system installs it. The malware then attempts to republish to other packages the victim maintains. Security researchers report that the campaign has compromised packages across the npm and PyPI ecosystems. Beyond OpenAI and TanStack, the attack has affected code belonging to Mistral AI, UiPath (NYSE: PATH), OpenSearch and Guardrails AI. Researchers note that the payload installs a persistent daemon that acts as a “dead-man’s switch.” If a victim revokes a stolen GitHub token, the malware can trigger a command to wipe the user’s home directory. Was OpenAI’s user data compromised? Following the attack, OpenAI enlisted a third-party forensics firm to assist with the investigation. The company said it found no evidence that its user data was accessed or that its production systems, intellectual property or software were compromised. However, the attackers still managed to extract some credential material from internal code repositories that those devices had access to. This included code-signing certificates for macOS apps. Now, Mac users must update their ChatGPT Desktop, Codex, and Atlas apps latest by June 12, 2026, or the software will be blocked by macOS security protections. OpenAI said it has found no evidence of malicious software signed with its certificates and no unauthorized modifications to published applications. The company noted that new notarization with the old certificates has already been blocked, meaning any fraudulent app attempting to use them would lack Apple’s notarization and be stopped by macOS security protections by default. Don’t just read crypto news. Understand it. Subscribe to our newsletter. It's free .

获取加密通讯
阅读免责声明 : 此处提供的所有内容我们的网站,超链接网站,相关应用程序,论坛,博客,社交媒体帐户和其他平台(“网站”)仅供您提供一般信息,从第三方采购。 我们不对与我们的内容有任何形式的保证,包括但不限于准确性和更新性。 我们提供的内容中没有任何内容构成财务建议,法律建议或任何其他形式的建议,以满足您对任何目的的特定依赖。 任何使用或依赖我们的内容完全由您自行承担风险和自由裁量权。 在依赖它们之前,您应该进行自己的研究,审查,分析和验证我们的内容。 交易是一项高风险的活动,可能导致重大损失,因此请在做出任何决定之前咨询您的财务顾问。 我们网站上的任何内容均不构成招揽或要约