process-status-widgetnpm
Malicious code in process-status-widget (npm) Remove it immediately and rotate any exposed credentials.
What this malware does
[email protected] is an empty stub (index.js exports {}, empty author/description, suspicious version 99.9.1) whose sole material effect on install is to resolve its only declared dependency 'ltidisafe' from a direct HTTPS tarball URL — https://ltidi.storage.googleapis.com/depenconf/ltidisafe-3.4.1.tgz — rather than from the npm registry. Installing this package causes npm to fetch and install arbitrary code from that anonymous Google Cloud Storage bucket, bypassing registry-side scanning and any tie to a known publisher. The bucket contents are mutable at the operator's discretion, and any lifecycle scripts inside the fetched tarball execute on install. The package shape (empty main, external URL dep, no functionality of its own) matches a dependency-smuggling / hijack-vehicle pattern.
Malicious versions
Indicators of compromise (SHA-256)
Detection & response playbook
Malicious packageFind it
Scan your lockfiles (package-lock.json, pnpm-lock.yaml, yarn.lock, requirements.txt, poetry.lock, etc.) and build artifacts for process-status-widget (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 process-status-widget across your stack and pipelines.
If you installed it — respond
Remove process-status-widget 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.
Did it already run?
If process-status-widget 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.
How O3 protects you
O3 blocks process-status-widget 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
Campaign
References
Credits
- Amazon Inspector · finder
Detect & block this
O3 blocks process-status-widget-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.