Attackers have compromised analytics service Picreel and open-source project Alpaca Forms to embed malicious code on over 4,600 websites.
The big picture
Sanguine Security founder Willem de Groot observed that attackers embedded malicious code on thousands of websites by modifying JavaScript files on the infrastructure of Picreel and Alpaca Forms.
Groot noted that both the hacks have been carried out by the same threat actor.
The malicious code embedded in the Picreel script has been detected on 1,249 websites, while the Alpaca Forms script has been detected on 3,435 domains.
The response
Michael Uzquiano, CTO at Cloud CMS, the developer of Alpaco Forms, told ZDNet in an email that attackers have compromised only one Alpaca Forms JavaScript file on its CDN (Content delivery network).
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