Learn how to detect compromise, assess your exposure to the LiteLLM supply chain attack, and use GitGuardian to orchestrate rapid incident response and secret remediation.
Malicious LiteLLM 1.82.7–1.82.8 via Trivy compromise deploys backdoor and steals credentials, enabling Kubernetes-wide persistence and lateral spread.
On the morning of March 24, 2026, tens of thousands of software developers working on AI applications were unknowingly exposed to malware.
Andrej Karpathy, the former Tesla AI director and OpenAI cofounder, is calling a recent Python package attack \"software ...
An attack on the open-source library for connecting to LLMs has apparently occurred, allowing two compromised packages to ...
After hacking Trivy, TeamPCP moved to compromise repositories across NPM, Docker Hub, VS Code, and PyPI, stealing over 300GB of data.
LiteLLM, a massively popular Python library, was compromised via a supply chain attack, resulting in the delivery of credential-harvesting malware to thousands of AI developers.
Researchers attributed the compromise to TeamPCP, the same threat group linked to the aforementioned Trivy compromise and subsequent malicious Docker images. The group has been observed running a ...
The compromised packages, linked to the Trivy breach, executed a three‑stage payload targeting AWS, GCP, Azure, Kubernetes configs, SSH keys, and automation pipelines before being removed.
LiteLLM, a widely used AI developer tool, was hit by a supply chain attack through a malicious PyPI release. The malware stole credentials, spread across systems, and crashed machines. The incident ...
The TeamPCP hacking group continues its supply-chain rampage, now compromising the massively popular "LiteLLM" Python package on PyPI and claiming to have stolen data from hundreds of thousands of ...
Two versions of LiteLLM, an open source interface for accessing multiple large language models, have been removed from the Python Package Index (PyPI) following a supply chain attack that injected ...