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failIncident: Malware
Scanned: about 21 hours ago

NotifyIcons

latest
removed
malicious
Research
NotifyIcons is a WPF platform implementation of a NotifyIcon, also known as a system tray icon or taskbar icon. Unlike relying solely on the Windows Forms NotifyIcon component, this package provides an autonomous control. It harnesses various features of the WPF framework to showcase enriched tooltips, popups, context menus, and balloon messages. Integration is flexible, allowing direct usage in code or embedding in any XAML file.
License: unknown
Published: over 1 year ago



SAFE Assessment

Compliance

Licenses
1 software distribution restrictions
Secrets
No sensitive information found

Security

Vulnerabilities
No known vulnerabilities detected
Hardening
No application hardening issues

Threats

Tampering
1 components prone to hijacking
Malware
7 supply chain attack artifacts

INCIDENTS FOR THIS VERSION:

malware
over 1 year agoReported By: ReversingLabs (Researcher)
See more info on our blog
removal
Reported By: Community

Popularity

N/A
Total Downloads
Contributor
Declared Dependencies
0
Dependents

Top issues

Problem

Proprietary ReversingLabs malware detection algorithms have determined that the software package contains one or more malicious components. The detection was made by either a static byte signature, software component identity, or a complete file hash. This malware detection method is considered highly accurate, and can typically attribute malware to previously discovered software supply chain attacks. It is common to have multiple supply chain attack artifacts that relate to a single malware incident.

Prevalence in NuGet community

0 packages
found in
Top 100
0 packages
found in
Top 1k
0 packages
found in
Top 10k
741 packages
in community

Next steps

If the software intent does not relate to malicious behavior, investigate the build and release environment for software supply chain compromise.
Avoid using this software package.

Problem

Threat researchers have manually inspected the software package and determined that it contains one or more malicious files. The detection was made by a hash-based file reputation lookup. This malware detection method is considered highly accurate, and can typically identify the malware family by name.

Prevalence in NuGet community

0 packages
found in
Top 100
0 packages
found in
Top 1k
0 packages
found in
Top 10k
741 packages
in community

Next steps

Investigate the build and release environment for software supply chain compromise.
Avoid using this software package.

Problem

Software developers use programming and design knowledge to build reusable software components. Software components are the basic building blocks for modern applications. Software consumed by an enterprise consists of hundreds, and sometimes even thousands of open source components. Software developers publish components they have authored to public repositories. Open source projects are the intellectual property of their respective authors. At any time, the authors may choose to completely remove the software component from a public repository. This often occurs when a software project reaches its end-of-life stage, or when the software authors lose interest in maintaining the project. This kind of removal frees up the software package name, its unique software identifier in the public repository, for other developers to use. However, new software project owners might have malicious intent. Threat actors are continuously monitoring popular package names in case their unique identifiers suddenly become available for hijacking. Once the software projects falls under new ownership, the new maintainers may opt to use the project popularity to spread malware to unsuspecting users.

Prevalence in NuGet community

No prevalence information at this time

Next steps

Inspect behaviors exhibited by the detected software components.
If the software behaviors differ from expected, investigate the build and release environment for software supply chain compromise.
Revise the use of components that raise these alarms. If you can't deprecate those components, make sure that their versions are pinned.
Avoid using this software package until it is vetted as safe.

Problem

Software license is a legal instrument that governs the use and distribution of software source code and its binary representation. Software publishers have the freedom to choose any commonly used or purposefully written license to publish their work under. While some licenses are liberal and allow almost any kind of distribution, with or without code modification, other licenses are more restrictive and impose rules for their inclusion in other software projects. Some software licenses place restrictions on software distribution of the code they apply to. These restrictions may extend to the services built upon the code licensed under such restrictive licenses. Some restrictive licenses explicitly state that the licensee may not provide the software to third parties as a hosted or managed service, where the service provides users with access to any substantial set of the features or functionality of the licensed software. When building commercial applications, this is typically undesirable. Therefore, the inclusion of any code that may impose limits on software distribution is commonly avoided or even prohibited by the organization policy.

Prevalence in NuGet community

0 packages
found in
Top 100
0 packages
found in
Top 1k
24 packages
found in
Top 10k
13291 packages
in community

Next steps

Confirm that the software package references a component or a dependency with a restrictive license.
Consider replacing the software component with an alternative that offers a license compatible with organization policy.

Problem

Software components contain executable code that performs actions implemented during its development. These actions are called behaviors. In the analysis report, behaviors are presented as human-readable descriptions that best match the underlying code intent. While most behaviors are benign, some are commonly abused by malicious software with the intent to cause harm. When a software package shares behavior traits with malicious software, it may become flagged by security solutions. Any detection from security solutions can cause friction for the end-users during software deployment. While the behavior is likely intended by the developer, there is a small chance this detection is true positive, and an early indication of a software supply chain attack.

Prevalence in NuGet community

0 packages
found in
Top 100
0 packages
found in
Top 1k
4 packages
found in
Top 10k
1095 packages
in community

Next steps

Investigate reported detections.
If the software intent does not relate to the reported behavior, investigate your build and release environment for software supply chain compromise.
You should delay the software release until the investigation is completed, or until the issue is risk accepted.
Consider rewriting the flagged code without using the marked behaviors.

Top behaviors

Prevalence in NuGet community

Behavior often found in this community (Common)
0 packages
found in
Top 100
12 packages
found in
Top 1k
98 packages
found in
Top 10k
39014 packages
in community

Prevalence in NuGet community

Behavior often found in this community (Common)
0 packages
found in
Top 100
17 packages
found in
Top 1k
100 packages
found in
Top 10k
34755 packages
in community

Prevalence in NuGet community

Behavior often found in this community (Common)
0 packages
found in
Top 100
59 packages
found in
Top 1k
458 packages
found in
Top 10k
532614 packages
in community

Prevalence in NuGet community

Behavior often found in this community (Common)
0 packages
found in
Top 100
23 packages
found in
Top 1k
177 packages
found in
Top 10k
65686 packages
in community

Prevalence in NuGet community

Behavior often found in this community (Common)
0 packages
found in
Top 100
63 packages
found in
Top 1k
513 packages
found in
Top 10k
735907 packages
in community

Top vulnerabilities

No vulnerabilities found.