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The Notepad++ supply chain attack — unnoticed execution chains and new IoCs - Printable Version

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The Notepad++ supply chain attack — unnoticed execution chains and new IoCs - harlan4096 - 03 February 26

Quote:Introduction

On February 2, 2026, the developers of Notepad++, a text editor popular among developers, published a statement claiming that the update infrastructure of Notepad++ has been compromised. According to the statement, this was due to a hosting provider level incident, which occurred from June to September 2025. However, attackers were able to retain access to internal services until December 2025.

Multiple execution chains and payloads

Having checked our telemetry related to this incident, we have been amazed to find out how different and unique were the execution chains used in this supply chain attack. We identified that over the course of four months, from July to October 2025, attackers who have compromised Notepad++ have been constantly rotating C2 server addresses used for distributing malicious updates, the downloaders used for implant delivery, as well as the final payloads.

We observed three different infection chains overall designed to attack about a dozen machines, belonging to:
  • Individuals located in Vietnam, El Salvador and Australia;
  • A government organization located in the Philippines;
  • A financial organization located in El Salvador;
  • An IT service provider organization located in Vietnam.
Despite the variety of payloads observed, Kaspersky solutions have been able to block the identified attacks as they occurred.

In this article, we describe the variety of the infection chains we observed in the Notepad++ supply chain attack, as well as provide numerous previously unpublished IoCs related to it.

Chain #1 — late July and early August 2025

We observed attackers to deploy a malicious Notepad++ update for the first time in late July 2025. It was hosted at http://45.76.155[.]202/update/update.exe. Notably, the first scan of this URL on the VirusTotal platform occurred in late September, by a user from Taiwan.

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