Security | Threat Detection | Cyberattacks | DevSecOps | Compliance

'Mini Shai-Hulud' supply chain attack targets SAP npm packages

On April 29, 2026, security researchers detailed a campaign known as ‘mini Shai-Hulud’ that involves compromised versions of npm packages used in SAP’s Cloud Application Programming Model (CAP). The malicious packages reportedly contain functionality to steal sensitive data such as credentials. The stolen data is encrypted and exfiltrated via public GitHub repositories. The maintainers of known-compromised packages have released updated versions.

Supply chain attacks hit Checkmarx and Bitwarden developer tools

Sophos X-Ops is aware of reports that two widely-used developer tools – the Checkmarx KICs security scanner and the Bitwarden CLI – were hijacked on April 22, 2026, to steal credentials from development environments. These attacks occurred within hours of each other and share the same command-and-control (C2) domain – potentially pointing to a single threat actor running a coordinated campaign. Both vendors have since reportedly contained the incidents.

Strengthening authentication with passkeys: A CISO playbook

For decades, passwords have been the standard method for protecting access to systems and accounts. However, passwords can be compromised or stolen via tactics such as brute-force attacks, phishing attacks, and infostealer malware. The shift to multi-factor authentication (MFA) added another layer of security by requiring additional authentication to verify the user’s identity – some combination of something you know, own, or (in the case of biometrics) are.

QEMU abused to evade detection and enable ransomware delivery

Sophos analysts are investigating the active abuse of QEMU, an “open-source machine emulator and virtualizer,” by threat actors seeking to hide malicious activity within virtualized environments. Attackers are drawn to QEMU and more common hypervisor-based virtualization tools like Hyper-V, VirtualBox, and VMware because malicious activity within a virtual machine (VM) is essentially invisible to endpoint security controls and leaves little forensic evidence on the host itself.

Secure by Design: Building cybersecurity into the foundation

Secure by Design: Building cybersecurity into the foundation An explainer of why this philosophy matters and how it reduces attack surface from the inside Secure by Design is a software development philosophy that treats security as a foundational requirement rather than an afterthought.

The vulnerability flood is here. Here's what it means - and how to prepare

We can't control the pace of AI-driven vulnerability discovery, but we can control how fast we respond. Last week, Thomas Ptacek published a piece arguing that vulnerability research is cooked. His thesis: AI agents are about to drown us in a steady stream of validated, exploitable, high-severity vulnerabilities, faster than anyone can patch them. But from where I sit, the more urgent question isn't whether the flood is coming, but whether the infrastructure we depend on can absorb it.

We let OpenClaw loose on an internal network. Here's what it found

Following our article on the challenges posed by agentic AI, we gave OpenClaw access to one of our legacy networks In my previous article on OpenClaw I wrote: “Even the most ‘risk-on’ organizations with deep AI and security experience, will likely find it challenging to configure OpenClaw in a way that effectively mitigates the risk of compromise or data loss, while still retaining any productivity value.” The Red Team here at Sophos took that as ‘challenge accepted’, s

Adobe Reader zero-day vulnerability in active exploitation

On April 7, 2026, a security researcher described an Adobe Reader zero-day vulnerability that has been exploited since at least December 2025. The vulnerability allows threat actors to execute privileged Acrobat APIs via specially crafted malicious PDF files that execute obfuscated JavaScript when opened. Exploitation allows attackers to steal sensitive user and system data and to potentially launch additional attacks and remotely execute code.