The developer of the popular open source text editor Notepad++ has confirmed that hackers hijacked the software to deliver malicious updates to users over the course of several months in 2025.

In a blog post published Monday, Notepad++ developer Don Ho said that the cyberattack was likely carried out by hackers associated with the Chinese government between June and December 2025, citing multiple analyses by security experts who examined the malware payloads and attack patterns. Ho said this “would explain the highly selective targeting” seen during the campaign.

  • officermike@lemmy.world
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    10 hours ago

    Good thing I always ignore notepad++ updates. I mean, good on the devs for active development, but having a user-intervention-required update option every time I launch? Feels clunky.

        • whereIsTamara@lemmy.org
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          9 hours ago

          Software should have version notification settings like, All, Security Only, Major Release, etc.

          While I enjoy staying current, I don’t need the 2.1.3.2.1.000000023 release where someone fixes a minor bug in a niche feature that I have never used to begin with.

          • officermike@lemmy.world
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            8 hours ago

            I’d love that. Some things I’m willing to be on beta release. Some things I just want to be invisible and silent unless there’s a security problem.

      • officermike@lemmy.world
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        8 hours ago

        I mean, isn’t that what Windows does anyway?

        I’d obviously prefer Notepad++ didn’t auto-install malware. Steam and Discord force auto-updates on every launch and do so without user intervention. I haven’t knowingly been burned by either yet, but they’re bigger players with more resources than Notepad++.

  • mfed1122@discuss.tchncs.de
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    9 hours ago

    From their blog post, it seems the software itself and its code was unaffected, but the attack was only on the website?

  • BaroqueInMind@piefed.social
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    11 hours ago

    Fuck.

    Anyone have an open source alternate that has commensurate features as N++

    Getting increasingly paranoid about the software I allow on my devices and now that I have a self-hosted LLM, I can feed it the source code and cross-reference it on 5Gb of CVE databases I’ve trained it on to ensure sanitary code.

    • surfrock66@lemmy.world
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      11 hours ago

      Just to be clear, N++ wasn’t compromised, the shared web host running the auto update infrastructure was. They responsibly disclosed it and shared safety steps. I don’t know if it is time to bail on them yet.

      • sahin@lemmy.world
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        2 hours ago

        I really don’ remember why i downloaded it. Generally when I first get my PC, I install programs like Sublime, Notepad++, vs code etc. I use Sublime for most of the tasks and it gets bloated, so I sometimes use Notepad++. I wasnt using for the last months. So I uninstalled it. The Json plugin was better than Sublime as far as I remember, maybe that’s why I installed it.