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Malware-as-Code: The Rise of DaaS on GitHub and the Collapse of Open-Source Trust
Episode 114

Malware-as-Code: The Rise of DaaS on GitHub and the Collapse of Open-Source Trust

Daily Security Review

June 7, 202539m 46s

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Show Notes

In this episode, we dissect one of the most sophisticated ongoing cybercrime trends—malware campaigns weaponizing GitHub repositories to compromise developers, gamers, and even rival hackers. By abusing GitHub’s search functionality and reputation signals, threat actors are pushing backdoored code under the guise of popular tools, game cheats, and exploit kits. These malicious repositories often look legitimate, complete with automated commits, fake contributors, and modest star counts to avoid suspicion.

We explore how Distribution-as-a-Service (DaaS) operations are driving these attacks, significantly lowering the barrier to entry for cybercriminals. Notable actors like “ischhfd83” and the “Stargazer Goblin” group have maintained thousands of malicious repositories, many embedding backdoors via PreBuild events, Python obfuscation, and Unicode deception techniques. Their payloads include info-stealers like Lumma and RATs like Remcos, with command-and-control often running through Telegram.

We also examine the implications of the Coinbase-linked cascading supply chain attack, how even cybercriminals are falling victim, and what developers and security teams need to do now to detect red flags, verify source code, and stop blindly trusting stars and search rankings. If you’re relying on open-source tools, this episode could save you from compiling your next compromise.



Topics

GitHub malwaresupply chain attackDistribution-as-a-ServiceDaaSbackdoored repositoriesopen-source securityischhfd83Stargazer GoblinPreBuild backdoorLumma StealerRemcos RATAsyncRATSakura RATfake GitHub starsmalicious commitsVisual Studio malwaredeveloper-targeted malwaregame cheat malwareinfo-stealerGitHub trust exploitationmalware in source codecybercrime-as-a-servicefake contributorsTelegram C2SpotBugs token theftGitHub Actions abusePython backdoorJavaScript obfuscationRLO trickopen-source ecosystem threatsCI/CD compromise