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Supply Chains, AI, and Cloud: 2025’s Biggest Fails

Image © Arstechnica
A year-end security roundup highlighted how supply-chain breaches, AI vulnerabilities, and cloud outages converged to create systemic risk for thousands of organizations, including many Fortune 500 firms and government agencies.

The year’s security retrospectives underscored a recurring pattern: supply-chain attacks remained a dominant threat, able to compromise downstream users through a single vulnerable vendor or library. In 2025, threat actors mimicked earlier playbooks by targeting popular code dependencies, cloud services, and widely used development ecosystems, affecting thousands of organizations across sectors. One December 2024 incident involving a backdoor in a Solana-related Web3.js library generated as much as $155,000 for attackers as wallets were exploited after a malicious package update.

Beyond that case, observers cataloged numerous supply-chain incidents: typosquatting of a Go mirror that hundreds or thousands of packages depend on, a wave of malicious NPM packages, and backdoors injected into Magento-based software used by hundreds of e-commerce sites, including several with multi-billion-dollar revenues. In total, dozens of open-source packages were modified to siphon cryptocurrency, and thousands of organizations relied on compromised TJ-actions components or npm packages that carried malicious updates.

Security researchers also documented 2025-era AI/LLM vulnerabilities that amplified risk. Poignant examples included prompt-injection attacks that corrupted long-term memory in AI agents such as ElizaOS and Google Gemini, allowing attackers to influence behavior and cause persistent exfiltration or fraudulent actions. Other incidents involved debacles around GitLab’s Duo chatbot and compromised credentials used to access business tools, underscoring the danger of trusting AI-enabled tooling in critical workflows.

Cloud providers also faced a string of outages and single-point-of-failure scenarios. In October a major cloud-network incident on a dominant provider caused widespread disruption, with a cascade of DNS errors bringing services offline for hours. Similar outages at other leading platforms—Cloudflare and Azure among them—highlighted how concentrated reliance on a few firms can ripple through the global Internet, affecting customers far beyond the immediate service endpoints.

Experts say the pattern from 2025 is clear: resilience now requires stricter software supply-chain hygiene, tighter control of third-party dependencies, robust AI governance to prevent memory-based manipulation, and diverse, well-architected cloud strategies. As the year closes, the security community continues to push for better tooling, transparent incident reporting, and proactive risk management to reduce future exposure.

 

Arstechnica

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