In the Dark About Supply Chain Vulnerabilities

The software supply chain can create a seemingly endless attack surface. Here’s what you can do to better protect it.

Is the “Barium” hacking collective Chinese? Russian? North Korean? It really doesn’t matter. What we know for sure is that their tactics are new, pervasive and exceptionally dangerous.

Barium’s tactics are detailed in Wired’s article, “A Mysterious Hacker Group is on a Supply Chain Hijacking Spree.” Barium skips past the pilfering of passwords or credit cards and instead goes directly to supplier-side malicious code injection. This approach emphasizes mass infiltration, mass surveillance and orchestrated, targeted attacks on trusted software supply chains.  This team of adversaries is upping their game to create much more efficient attacks with higher returns.

Control Everything and Everyone

Adversaries have one core motivational commonality: They want to “own” (control and manipulate) everything. The larger the target and the more disruptive the consequences, the better.

Most companies underestimate their attack surface, putting mission-critical software supply chains at risk. With no exaggeration, this can mean life or death. Who, for example, has access to transportation networks, healthcare devices, defense systems and energy production?

Easy Target: Every Point Along Your Supply Chain

Barium’s massive reach means it may already be in your software supply chain, with code that is awaiting instructions. This begs the question: Who else might be trying to breach your supply chain?

In another recent article, “Most Businesses Vulnerable to Supply Chain Cyber Attacks,” Warwick Ashford responds to a new report by Accenture. He’s not wrong; most businesses are woefully unprepared for cybersecurity incidents because they are operating with outdated security models. Once it was enough to protect your business with a network firewall and password-protected devices. Today, everything is cloud-based, software-driven and porous. Security must be built in from the ground up. Those operating without the mantra “secure by design” are boosting their exposure to adversaries.

Barium’s success rests on the normalized behavior of software updates. Similarly, in the world of open source software projects, we’ve increasingly seen the trust of the community preyed upon. Bad actors are attacking software supply chains and poisoning the well. Smaller, yet popular projects, with only one or two owners, are finding themselves as targets for infiltration.

The ramifications are staggering. Your physical supply chain is comprised of software at every step. The vulnerabilities expand with every added contractor, every new device, every application update and every software build.

To protect your physical supply chain, you need to protect your software supply chain.

The Value of a Software Bill of Materials

At Sonatype, we’re often asked where one should start to better understand their software supply chains. Our answer is consistent and simple: Start by producing a software bill of materials—often referred to as an SBOM. Within seconds, free tools that produce an SBOM can tell you what open source software components your development teams are using. The SBOM can also describe which of those components have known security vulnerabilities or license risks.

Running an SBOM will reveal a few things to you.  The average application contains more than 100 open source software components.  Of these 100 components, you are likely to find six to 12 that have at least one vulnerability. And with the right tools, creating an SBOM report for your applications, can take as little as five to 10 seconds, on average.

Talking to your teams and having discussions around what’s in your software is extremely important. Put simply, without an SBOM you’re flying blind when—not if —a bad actor tampers with the code. The potential liability and costs can be enormous. An SBOM is the map you use to solve it.

Matt Howard

Avatar photo

Matt Howard

Matt Howard is CMO and SVP of Sonatype, the inventors of software supply chain automation. He is a proven executive and entrepreneur with over 20 years experience developing high-growth software companies. Prior to Sonatype, Mr. Howard co-founded, developed and successfully sold two software companies.

matt-howard has 13 posts and counting.See all posts by matt-howard