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Daily SMB Cyber Intelligence Brief

Today’s SME cyber lookout: poisoned software updates, fake download sites and UK-targeted phishing

What small and medium-sized businesses should look out for today.

High Thursday 04 June 2026, 18:49 UK time
Today’s look-out: Software supply-chain & fake download scams (developer tools, plugins, GitHub/CI) plus targeted phishing

What to look out for today

Three themes to brief your team on today:

  • Compromised open-source packages (including a reported npm supply-chain incident affecting multiple packages with infostealer malware).
  • Fake websites impersonating popular tools that show up high in Google results and deliver malware when downloaded.
  • Targeted phishing campaigns expanding into the UK and Europe, designed to drop remote access malware and steal credentials.

Why this matters to smaller businesses

  • You don’t need to be a “tech company” to be affected. Many SMEs rely on web agencies, SaaS integrations, plugins, and outsourced IT who use open-source components and automation tools.
  • One compromised dependency can lead to: stolen passwords (including email and accounting logins), session hijacking, fraudulent invoices, and wider supplier/customer notification work.
  • Fake download sites target everyday work. Marketing, finance, operations and IT staff often search for “free tools”, converters, remote support tools, or utilities under time pressure.

Warning signs

  • Staff report downloading a tool from “a site that looked right” found via Google, rather than the vendor’s known domain/app store.
  • Unexpected prompts to “disable antivirus”, “allow browser notifications”, or run a downloaded installer to “complete setup”.
  • New admin accounts, new MFA devices, or unusual sign-ins in Microsoft 365/Google Workspace audit logs.
  • Developers/IT mention “quickly adding a package” or updating build/CI automation without normal review.
  • Inbound emails that push urgent document review, shipping issues, HMRC/payroll queries, or “shared files”, especially if they lead to a login page.

How attackers may exploit the situation

  • Supply-chain route: attackers plant malware into open-source packages or abuse automation (e.g. CI/GitHub Actions). When dependencies are installed or workflows run, credentials/tokens can be stolen or malicious changes introduced downstream.
  • SEO / fake tool portals: fake “project download” pages funnel staff to malware through convincing pages that mimic legitimate tools.
  • Targeted phishing: attackers adapt lures to local regions (including the UK) to get a foothold, then move to email, cloud storage and finance workflows to intercept payments.

What to do today

  • Tell staff: only download software from your organisation’s approved sources (company portal, Microsoft Store/Apple App Store, or known vendor links). If in doubt, stop and ask.
  • Put a quick control on downloads: require admin approval for new software installs (even for “small utilities”).
  • For any web/dev supplier or internal dev work: ask for confirmation they have reviewed dependencies and are monitoring for compromised packages and workflow risks.
  • Review cloud sign-in alerts: check for unusual logins, impossible travel, and new OAuth/app consents in Microsoft 365/Google Workspace.
  • Prepare for invoice/payment fraud: remind finance teams that “bank details change” requests must be verified via a known phone number, not email.

Ask your IT provider

  • Do we have a policy that prevents/controls ad-hoc software installs and downloads from unverified sites?
  • How are we monitoring Microsoft 365/Google for suspicious sign-ins and new app/OAuth consents?
  • For any development work (internal or outsourced): how do you vet and monitor open-source dependencies (including npm) and build automation workflows?
  • Do we have an agreed process to rapidly disable accounts, revoke sessions/tokens, and reset passwords if an infostealer is suspected?

Patch watch - only one short paragraph, and only if relevant

Today’s main risk is not “a patch list” but trust in tools and suppliers. If you operate specialist industrial/monitoring systems, check with your supplier whether any recent advisories affect your environment and ensure internet exposure is tightly controlled.

One action today

Send a same-day message to staff: “Only download software from approved sources; if Google gives you a download site, stop and ask IT,” and require admin approval for any new installs.

Related Actions On Cyber resource

Actions On Cyber checklist: “Phishing & payment change verification (invoice fraud) – 60-second controls for SMEs”

Sources

This brief is for general awareness and does not replace advice from your IT provider, legal adviser, insurer or incident response specialist.