Likelihood: HIGH
Impact: VERY HIGH
Treatment: MITIGATE
Confidence: Moderate
Likelihood is high because the compromised Trivy GitHub Action is confirmed to have been actively used as a credential-harvesting vector in CI/CD pipelines, the malicious package remains available to any organization that has not pinned or audited their Action version, and the campaign spans multiple widely-used tools (LiteLLM, Checkmarx KICS) increasing population exposure; impact is very_high because confirmed outcomes already include source code exfiltration from hundreds of repositories and active cloud infrastructure compromise via stolen AWS credentials — the business consequence extends to downstream customer data (financial institutions, government agencies) and potential regulatory exposure, with the incident explicitly noted as not fully contained.
Treatment rationale: Active credential theft and ongoing cloud infrastructure exposure require immediate containment and remediation actions — transfer and accept are inappropriate given the confirmed compromise and uncontained status, and avoidance is only partially achievable (removing the affected Actions) while broader pipeline hardening remains necessary.
Third-Party / Supply-Chain Risk
This is a textbook NIST SP 800-161 Tier 1 supply-chain compromise: TeamPCP inserted a malicious payload into the Trivy GitHub Action (an open-source dependency consumed directly in CI/CD pipelines), meaning any organization that executed the compromised Action version implicitly granted it access to pipeline secrets, AWS credentials, and source repositories without any direct interaction with the threat actor. Secondary exposure exists via LiteLLM (PyPI) and Checkmarx KICS, both shared-platform dependencies with broad organizational adoption. Organizations using GitHub Actions with unpinned or unaudited third-party Actions are structurally exposed to this same attack surface regardless of whether they use Trivy specifically.
Loss Exposure (illustrative)
Magnitude: very high — illustrative $10M–$100M+ for an organization at Cisco's scale; illustrative $500K–$5M for a mid-market organization with confirmed CI/CD pipeline exposure
Frequency: For an organization that ran the compromised Trivy Action version during the active campaign window: single confirmed loss event already in progress; recurrence probability elevated until all affected Actions are removed, all exposed credentials are rotated, and pipeline hardening is implemented
Annualized: For an already-compromised organization: primary loss event cost dominates; for an exposed-but-not-yet-compromised organization, illustrative expected loss given confirmed active campaign and moderate-to-high probability of credential harvesting is illustrative $1M–$10M on an annualized basis until remediation is confirmed complete
Basis: Magnitude driven by: (1) confirmed scope — 300+ repositories including proprietary AI product code and third-party customer code, (2) confirmed secondary-stage impact — AWS credential abuse against cloud infrastructure, (3) downstream customer notification and contractual exposure across regulated sectors (financial, government), (4) incident-response, forensic, and legal costs for an uncontained compromise of this breadth; frequency anchored to confirmed active exploitation status and the breadth of the affected tool ecosystem rather than historical base rates
Illustrative estimate — not actuarially derived.
Insurance / Contractual / Legal — Potential Obligations
Potential triggers, not legal determinations. Verify with counsel/broker before acting.
• Confirmed exfiltration of customer source code held on behalf of banks, government agencies, and BPOs may invoke contractual breach or data-handling obligations under those customer agreements — verify with counsel.
• Theft of AWS credentials subsequently used against cloud infrastructure may constitute a security incident triggering cyber-insurance notice obligations under policy incident-reporting provisions — verify with broker.
• Government agency customer data involvement may implicate federal contractor security incident reporting requirements (e.g., DFARS 252.204-7012 or equivalent) — verify with counsel.
• Exposure of source code from financial-sector customers may trigger notification or incident-response obligations under financial sector regulatory frameworks (e.g., GLBA, NYDFS) applicable to those customers — verify with counsel.
• PII present in any of the 300-plus exfiltrated repositories could invoke state breach-notification statutes in affected jurisdictions — verify with counsel.