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Malicious package

@druids/uinpm

Malicious code in @druids/ui (npm) Remove it immediately and rotate any exposed credentials.

MAL-2026-4385
Immediate action
Remove the package, then rotate any secrets the build/runtime could reach.
npm uninstall @druids/ui

What this malware does

The package's package.json declares a dependency ltidisafe resolved not from the npm registry but as a direct tarball URL: https://ltidi.storage.googleapis.com/depenconf/ltidisafe-2.6.2.tgz. On npm install, npm will fetch and install that tarball, executing whatever lifecycle scripts and code it contains on the installer's machine with no audit trail in this package's published source. Several corroborating signals indicate this is dependency-confusion / namespace-abuse tooling rather than a legitimate UI library: the GCS bucket path literally contains the string depenconf (a common shorthand for dependency-confusion); the package version is 99.9.1, the high-version-squat pattern used to outrank a private internal package of the same name; package metadata (author, description) is empty; and the package's own index.js is near-empty, providing no library functionality consistent with the @druids/ui name. The installer-side harm is the silent inclusion of an attacker-controlled, registry-unaudited transitive into the dependency tree.

Malicious versions

1 flagged
99.9.1

Indicators of compromise (SHA-256)

071ce35c0d6a17c606e5448f4c485228df973342935b0a11519304050877edf5
bffabf1852f8882e1b5442ad9d5021ed43f90f13a48f4151e898709880ee08fe

Detection & response playbook

Malicious package
  1. Find it

    Scan your lockfiles (package-lock.json, pnpm-lock.yaml, yarn.lock, requirements.txt, poetry.lock, etc.) and build artifacts for @druids/ui (version 99.9.1). O3 Security's supply-chain scanner checks every dependency against known-malicious package intelligence at install time and in CI, flagging @druids/ui across your stack and pipelines.

  2. If you installed it — respond

    Remove @druids/ui from your project and lockfile, then assume any secrets accessible to the build or runtime were exposed: rotate API keys, tokens, and credentials, and audit for unexpected outbound activity or persistence.

  3. Did it already run?

    If @druids/ui was ever installed, its post-install/runtime payload may have already executed. O3's L7 egress monitoring and runtime eBPF sensors detect the credential exfiltration or command-and-control callback after install and block the malicious outbound channel, so you catch and contain the actual compromise — not just the presence of the package.

  4. How O3 protects you

    O3 blocks @druids/ui before install through its supply-chain scanner, and if it has already run, detects and severs the exfiltration or C2 callback at runtime through L7 egress monitoring and eBPF.

Frequently asked questions

No. @druids/ui on npm has been identified as a malicious package (version 99.9.1 flagged). It should be removed immediately — do not install or keep it in your dependency tree.

Campaign

IN-MAL-2026-004138IN-MAL-2026-004139

References

Credits

  • Amazon Inspector · finder

Detect & block this

O3 blocks @druids/ui-class packages before install and in CI — and if it already ran, its runtime egress monitoring catches the malicious outbound activity and severs the channel.