Containing Malicious Package Updates in npm with a Lightweight Permission System.

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Bibliographic Details
Title: Containing Malicious Package Updates in npm with a Lightweight Permission System.
Authors: Ferreira, Gabriel1, Jia, Limin1, Sunshine, Joshua1, Kästner, Christian1
Source: ICSE: International Conference on Software Engineering. 5/22/2021, p1334-1346. 13p.
Subjects: Supply chains, Software ecosystems, Computer software packaging, Software engineering, Artificial intelligence
Abstract: The large amount of third-party packages available in fast-moving software ecosystems, such as Node.js/npm, enables attackers to compromise applications by pushing malicious updates to their package dependencies. Studying the npm repository, we observed that many packages in the npm repository that are used in Node.js applications perform only simple computations and do not need access to filesystem or network APIs. This offers the opportunity to enforce least-privilege design per package, protecting applications and package dependencies from malicious updates. We propose a lightweight permission system that protects Node.js applications by enforcing package permissions at runtime. We discuss the design space of solutions and show that our system makes a large number of packages much harder to be exploited, almost for free. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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Database: Engineering Source
Description
Abstract:The large amount of third-party packages available in fast-moving software ecosystems, such as Node.js/npm, enables attackers to compromise applications by pushing malicious updates to their package dependencies. Studying the npm repository, we observed that many packages in the npm repository that are used in Node.js applications perform only simple computations and do not need access to filesystem or network APIs. This offers the opportunity to enforce least-privilege design per package, protecting applications and package dependencies from malicious updates. We propose a lightweight permission system that protects Node.js applications by enforcing package permissions at runtime. We discuss the design space of solutions and show that our system makes a large number of packages much harder to be exploited, almost for free. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
DOI:10.1109/ICSE43902.2021.00121