Likelihood: HIGH
Impact: HIGH
Treatment: MITIGATE
Confidence: Moderate
Likelihood is high because the malicious plugins accumulated ~70,000 installs over eight months before discovery, indicating widespread silent deployment in developer environments with no confirmed detection mechanism in place; impact is high because stolen AI API keys directly enable financial fraud via unauthorized usage charges, potential exfiltration of proprietary code and prompt data submitted through AI integrations, and AI service account takeover — all with immediate business consequence.
Treatment rationale: The threat is active, the exposure vector (third-party plugin marketplace) is controllable through policy and tooling, and the financial and IP consequences are too material to accept or defer to transfer alone.
Third-Party / Supply-Chain Risk
JetBrains Marketplace functions as a shared software distribution platform — a classic NIST SP 800-161 Tier 1 supplier risk where the organization's trust in JetBrains' vetting controls is inherited by every developer consuming marketplace plugins. Secondary third-party exposure exists at the AI provider layer (OpenAI, DeepSeek, SiliconFlow): stolen API keys represent credential compromise of service accounts hosted and billed by those providers, meaning attacker-controlled activity runs under your organization's identity with those vendors. Organizations using shared or service-account API keys across developer teams amplify the blast radius across multiple projects and cost centers.
Loss Exposure (illustrative)
Magnitude: moderate to high — illustrative $150K–$2M per exposed organization, varying significantly by API key scope and developer team size
Frequency: For an organization with JetBrains IDE usage and no plugin vetting controls, probability of at least one affected developer install during the eight-month campaign window is plausible to likely given the ~70,000 install footprint; post-discovery, frequency drops sharply if remediation is enacted
Annualized: Illustrative single-event ALE of $150K–$2M for the primary loss scenario (unauthorized API charges + incident response + IP triage); recurring loss probability drops near-zero post-remediation, making annualized framing less meaningful than point-in-time exposure cost
Basis: Loss magnitude derived from three primary loss factors: (1) unauthorized AI API usage charges — AI API costs can accumulate at hundreds to thousands of dollars per hour at scale with no rate cap if keys are used for automated abuse, driving a wide range depending on key privileges and time-to-detection; (2) incident response and forensic triage costs for identifying which developers were affected, which keys were exposed, and whether proprietary code or customer data transited compromised AI sessions — estimated at meaningful internal and external labor cost; (3) IP and competitive intelligence loss from prompt history or fine-tuning data is qualitatively material but not quantifiable without knowing what developers submitted through the affected integrations. No third-party benchmark figures cited.
Illustrative estimate — not actuarially derived.
Insurance / Contractual / Legal — Potential Obligations
Potential triggers, not legal determinations. Verify with counsel/broker before acting.
• Exfiltration of proprietary source code or AI prompt data via compromised API keys may constitute a data breach or unauthorized access event under cyber insurance policy definitions — verify with broker whether this event pattern triggers notice or claim obligations.
• If developer AI integrations processed any customer data or PII, exposure of prompt history may invoke state or federal breach-notification obligations — verify with counsel before assuming no notification duty.
• Unauthorized API usage charges generated by attacker activity may implicate vendor terms of service liability or dispute rights with OpenAI, DeepSeek, or SiliconFlow — verify with counsel and review provider agreements for fraud-liability clauses.
• Organizations in regulated sectors (financial services, healthcare, defense) should assess whether compromised developer tooling and potential IP exfiltration triggers supply-chain incident reporting obligations under applicable regulatory frameworks — verify with counsel.