OSV Malicious Advisory
scanned 2h ago · by OpenSSF/OSVOpenSSF/OSV advisory MAL-2026-6987 confirms this npm version as malicious. Package @luminarycloudinternal/lcvis-st@9999.0.2 is published to the public npm registry under an internal-looking scope with an artificially high version number designed to outrank any legitimate internal release, so misconfigured installers resolve this public copy. On install, the postinstall.js script collects host and user identifiers (os.hostname(), os.userInfo().username, OS type/release/platform/arch), npm...
Advisory
MAL-2026-6987
Source
OpenSSF Malicious Packages via OSV
Summary
Malicious code in @luminarycloudinternal/lcvis-st (npm)
Details
Package @luminarycloudinternal/lcvis-st@9999.0.2 is published to the public npm registry under an internal-looking scope with an artificially high version number designed to outrank any legitimate internal release, so misconfigured installers resolve this public copy. On install, the postinstall.js script collects host and user identifiers (os.hostname(), os.userInfo().username, OS type/release/platform/arch), npm package name/version and user-agent, and CI/GitHub identifiers (CI, GITHUB_ACTIONS, GITHUB_REPOSITORY, RUNNER_NAME, GITHUB_SHA, GITHUB_REF, GITHUB_WORKFLOW), then sends them as query parameters via HTTPS GET to a hardcoded third-party endpoint at poc-luminary-npm-1782987043.testingboxes.com (postinstall.js line 34). The package self-labels as a Bugcrowd bounty canary, but the behavior — dependency-confusion scope/version combined with install-time transmission of installer identifiers to a hardcoded third-party host — is exfiltration for any installer other than the intended bounty target.
## Source: ghsa-malware (3c54509ad86f99f5d01258e1d660deca5eb908d09b71ea17446402ece2584746) Any computer that has this package installed or running should be considered fully compromised. All secrets and keys stored on that computer should be rotated immediately from a different computer. The package should be removed, but as full control of the computer may have been given to an outside entity, there is no guarantee that removing the package will remove all malicious software resulting from installing it.
Decision reason
No blocking static signals were detected.
Decision evidence
public snapshotBehavioral surface
NoLicense
Source & flagged code
0 flaggedNo flagged code excerpts are attached to this scan.
Findings
1 Low
LowNo License