npm

web3-eth-util @6.2.8

Vulnerability report · Last retrieved from osv.dev June 24, 2026 at 6:36 AM UTC

Malicious

OSV ID

MAL-2026-6325

Ecosystem

npm

Summary

Package name and metadata impersonate the legitimate @ethereumjs/util / ethereumjs-util packages: README is copied verbatim from the upstream ethereumjs project (and even instructs users to npm install eth-util ), the contributor list and repository URL point at ethereumjs/ethereumjs-monorepo, but the package is published under a different name and ownership. The published dist/index.js (line ~57) contains require("assertcore") and package.json declares "assertcore": "^3.1.7" as a runtime dependency. The human-authored src/index.ts has no such import, and the browser build at dist.browser/index.js also omits it — the extra require is injected only into the Node-targeted build that ships in the npm tarball, so reviewers reading the GitHub source see clean code while npm install + require('web3-eth-util') silently loads the third-party 'assertcore' package in the consumer's Node process with full privileges. 'assertcore' is not part of the legitimate @ethereumjs/util sources and resembles a typosquat of the standard 'assert' module. The combination — brand impersonation of a widely used Ethereum utility package, source/dist divergence hiding the injection from GitHub readers, and a require-time pull of an unrelated third-party package — is a dependency-chain dropper pattern that delivers attacker-controlled code to anyone who installs and imports this package.

Source: amazon-inspector (f2e70ad91037bdc97e6b1ab8c95f5f2b5eecdb4524582d79dae5f240cbdbfc29)

Protect your entire dependency tree

Scan your lock files automatically on every PR. Block malicious packages before they reach production.