Bitwarden CLI Compromised in Ongoing Checkmarx Supply Chain Campaign Ravie Lakshmanan Apr 23, 2026 Supply Chain Attack / Open Source Bitwarden CLI has been compromised as part of the newly discovered and ongoing Checkmarx supply chain campaign , according to new findings from JFrog and Socket. "The affected package version appears to be @bitwarden/cli@2026.4.0 , and the malicious code was published in 'bw1.js,' a file included in the package contents," the application security company said . "The attack appears to have leveraged a compromised GitHub Action in Bitwarden's CI/CD pipeline, consistent with the pattern seen across other affected repositories in this campaign." In a post on X, JFrog said the rogue version of the package "steals GitHub/npm tokens, .ssh, .env, shell history, GitHub Actions and cloud secrets, then exfiltrates the data to private domains and as GitHub commits." While the malicious version is no longer available for download from npm, Socket said the compromise follows the same GitHub Actions supply chain vector identified in the Checkmarx campaign. As part of the effort, threat actors have been found abusing stolen GitHub tokens to inject a new GitHub Actions workflow that captures secrets available to the workflow run, and uses harvested npm credentials to push malicious versions of the package to read the malware to downstream users. According to security researcher Adnan Khan, the threat actor is said to have used a malicious workflow to publish the malicious bitwarden CLI. "I believe this is the first time a package using NPM trusted publishing has been compromised," Khan added . Bitwarden CLI Attack Chain | Source: OX Security It's suspected that the threat actor known as TeamPCP is behind the latest attack aimed at Checkmarx. As of writing, TeamPCP's X account has been suspended for violating the platform's rules. OX Security, in a breakdown of the attack, said it identified the string "Shai-Hulud: The Third Coming" in the package, suggesting this is likely the next phase of the supply chain attack campaign that came to light last year. Reference to the "Shai-Hulud: The Third Coming" "The latest Shai Hulud incident is just the latest in a long chain of threats targeting developers around the world. User data is being publicly exfiltrated to GitHub, often going undetected because security tools typically don't flag data being sent there," Moshe Siman Tov Bustan, Security Research Team Lead at OX Security, said. "This makes the risk significantly more dangerous: anyone searching GitHub can potentially find and access those credentials. At that point, sensitive data is no longer in the hands of a single threat actor – it’s exposed to anyone." When reached for comment, Bitwarden confirmed the incident, but emphasized that no end user data was accessed as part of the attack. The entire statement is reproduced verbatim below - The Bitwarden security team identified and contained a malicious package that was briefly distributed through the npm delivery path for @bitwarden/cli@2026.4.0 between 5:57 PM and 7:30 PM (ET) on April 22, 2026, in connection with a broader Checkmarx supply chain incident. The investigation found no evidence that end user vault data was accessed or at risk, or that production data or production systems were compromised. Once the issue was detected, compromised access was revoked, the malicious npm release was deprecated, and remediation steps were initiated immediately. The issue affected the npm distribution mechanism for the CLI during that limited window, not the integrity of the legitimate Bitwarden CLI codebase or stored vault data. Users who did not download the package from npm during that window were not affected. Bitwarden has completed a review of internal environments, release paths, and related systems, and no additional impacted products or environments have been identified at this time. A CVE for Bitwarden CLI version 2026.4.0 is being issued in connection with this incident. (This is a developing story. Please check for more details.) Found this article interesting? Follow us on Google News , Twitter and LinkedIn to read more exclusive content we post. SHARE Tweet Share Share Share Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Share on Linkedin Share on Reddit Share on Hacker News Share on Email Share on WhatsApp Share on Facebook Messenger Share on Telegram SHARE Application Security , Checkmarx , CI/CD Security , cybersecurity , GitHub , Malware , npm Security , Open Source , supply chain attack Trending News 108 Malicious Chrome Extensions Steal Google and Telegram Data, Affecting 20,000 Users Mirax Android RAT Turns Devices into SOCKS5 Proxies, Reaching 220,000 via Meta Ads New PHP Composer Flaws Enable Arbitrary Command Execution — Patches Released OpenAI Launches GPT-5.4-Cyber with Expanded Access for Security Teams Microsoft Issues Patches for SharePoint Zero-Day and 168 Other New Vulnerabilities Actively Exploited nginx-ui Flaw (CVE-2026-33032) Enables Full Nginx Server Takeover n8n Webhooks Abused Since October 2025 to Deliver Malware via Phishing Emails Cisco Patches Four Critical Identity Services, Webex Flaws Enabling Code Execution Apache ActiveMQ CVE-2026-34197 Added to CISA KEV Amid Active Exploitation Three Microsoft Defender Zero-Days Actively Exploited; Two Still Unpatched Anthropic MCP Design Vulnerability Enables RCE, Threatening AI Supply Chain Vercel Breach Tied to Context AI Hack Exposes Limited Customer Credentials Why Security Leaders Are Layering Email Defense on Top of Secure Email Gateways Why Threat Intelligence Is the Missing Link in CTEM Prioritization and Validation The Hidden Security Risks of Shadow AI in Enterprises Your MTTD Looks Great. Your Post-Alert Gap Doesn't Popular Resources Discover Key AI Security Gaps CISOs Face in 2026 Fix Rising Application Security Risks Driven by AI Development Automate Alert Triage and Investigations Across Every Threat How to Identify Risky Browser Extensions in Your Organization