This is why I don’t update things that don’t need updates. Untill I switched to Linux I had been using the same version for like a decade.
Also I’d imagine the American government is doing the exact same shit. Or rather Israel is doing it in behalf of the American government
If I recall correctly this is the second time this has happened to N++. Fool me once… can’t get fooled again.
Three times++, actually. The second attack was documented to have resumed after the third, with different payload URLs.
I’ve kind of stopped following things up since I left windows, but maybe you’re remembering when this actually happened a while ago? This is just some in-progress post-mortem report.


And work bosses saw a news story on this and banned the app outright :( can anyone suggest a replacement that is not paid and has features useful for searching lots of large logs files quickly for keywords?
Notepad++ installed from any package manager was perfectly fine and safe.
I know.
I’m only using Sublime Text and the Notepad that is included with Windows. Not sure exactly what you’re looking for.
Emacs
NotepadQQ 😆
Rename the shortcut to notepad++2?
Kate
+1 for Kate. I think its ment to be an acronym for KDE Advanced text editor but its a linux program that feels very close to notepad++ and will handle large files with gusto
VSCodium.
Emacs
He’s asking for a text editor, not to join a cult. /s
Sublime 3
Awesome choice but one crucial detail is that commercial use requires a license.
I guess Geany could work?
I downloaded that one today. It will work for now but it’s missing a couple of n++ features I use.
Zed! Fastest GUI editor out there other than Sublime Text.
Ive always had notepad++ crash on large files or xml’s with no newlines. I use sublime in those cases :)
That said, as a developer, notepad++ is a very often used tool haha
I regularly open CSVs in the range of 500MB to 2GB in notepad++ without any problem…
China, Russia, the US, fucking Israel. They all piss me off so fucking much. Can’t we live in a sane world just for a single fucking day?
At least China wants to make money, others not only money
Make money? Occupied Tibet and Sri Lanka would like to have a word.
Or the ongoing human rights abuse against the Uyghurs in Xinjiang.
The Tiananmen massacre also was a non-profit endeavour.
Ok, but how this compares to what Israel or Russia does?
Why must this he compared? The Tiananmen Square massacre was insanely inhumane. They crushed peaceful protestors on bicycles with fucking tanks. They squished the people into a pulp so they could hose them into the gutters. Israel and Russia are also evil, also on a larger scale but that doesn’t absolve China from their shit.
Ok, It doesn’t have to be.
I see if we compare China, Russia, Usa and Israel, the China looks the most peaceful in that comparison.
China has set itself a date for when they want to capture Taiwan: 2027. That’s not very peaceful of them. When someone says what they’re going to do, believe them. Also, Tibet occupation, Uyghur forced labor camps as well as likely mass sterilization (genocide).
At least China wants to make money, others not only money
But your original comment is still untrue.
I see if we compare China, Russia, Usa and Israel, the China looks the most peaceful in that comparison.
Uyghurs would like to have a word.
How sri lanka is occupied?
Did any of you ever fucking heard of debt-trap diplomacy? I don’t enjoy the idea of having to exchange one hegemony for another.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Debt-trap_diplomacy#Sri_Lanka
https://www.csis.org/analysis/game-loans-how-china-bought-hambantota
Oof. Kudos to Notepad++ for being up front with the details.
Yikes… i guess i am confused though. What data was being sent through this channel? What did they get from people while it happened and why did it take 2 months past them stopping it to finally make a release? I love the app, but this sounds really bad.
The software itself, and the devs, have little to nothing to do with this besides detecting the issue. Which was not obvious, since (it seems) the attack was targeted at specific IPs/hosts/places. It likely worked transparently without alteration for most users, probably including the devs themselves.
It also would only affects updates through the built-in updater; if you disabled that, and/or installed through some package managers, you would not have been affected.
A disturbing situation indeed. I assume some update regarding having adequately digitally signed updates were done (at least, I hope… I don’t really use N++ anymore). But the reality is, some central infrastructure are vulnerable to people with a lot of resources, and actually plugging those holes requires a bit of involvement from the users, depending how far one would go. Even if everything’s signed, you have to either know the signatory’s public key beforehand or get a certificate that you trust. And that trust is derived from an authority you trust (either automatically through common CA lists, or because you manually added it to your system). And these authorities themselves can become a weak point when a state actor butts in, meaning the only good solution is double checking those certificates with the actual source, and actually blocking everything when they change, which is somewhat tedious… and so on and so on.
Of course, some people do that; when security matters a LOT. But for most people, basic measures should be enough… usually.
From my understanding: Basically the attackers could reply to your version check request (usually done automatically) and tell N++ that there were a new version available. If you then approved the update dialogue, N++ would download and execute the binary from the update link that the server sent you. But this didn’t necessarily need to be a real update, it could have been any binary since neither the answer to the update check nor the download link were verified by N++
Thats what i was thinking, but there is no mention on if this did happen and if it did what was compromised or allowed to happen.
How would n++ devs know?
Expanding on this: the exploit was against their domain name, redirecting selected update requests away from the notepad++ servers. The software itself didn’t validate that the domain actually points to notepad++ servers, and the notepad++ update servers would not see any information that would tell them what was happening.
Likely they picked some specific developers with a known public IP, and only used this to inject those specific people with malware.
The previous release already fixed this, or evaded the issue.
The channel was the update mechanism. Upon Notepad++ checking for updates, they were able to inject their own. So if you updated via the apps own update checker they could have misdirected you into installing something else or something modified.
I would like to know starting from wich version should i be concerned. I haven’t updated in a while i think.
The timeline says the attack started in June of 2025 and continued through Dec 2, 2025. If you installed, updated, or silently updated during that period you may have been targeted / compromised.
How would you know if you updated?
My notepad++ is on 8.9.1 and I have no idea how it’s on that ver (ninite I think is where I sourced it…maybe it’s auto updating?)
Odds are you weren’t on the “targeted list”.
If you don’t know, you’re probably auto updating.
If you updated or installed in 2025 after June-ish, the safe thing to do is uninstall, then download from the new (theoretically more secure) website and install the new (theoretically more secure) 8.9.1.
If you were pwned by an update during later 2025, they could disguise just about anything in your Notepad++ and its associated files - make it look perfectly normal, make it act perfectly normal, but have their own malware on your system doing… whatever it is they want it to do.
I understand one of the things they were doing is running a proxy to carry traffic through your system, so if you see a lot of unexpected network activity (under Windoze how can you tell?) you may have been compromised. But that’s not the only thing they could have done, nobody has really analyzed the attack yet and even after they do, you might have gotten a “special” payload that the analysis team didn’t see…
What was the latest version before June 2025?
Looks like 8.8.1 was May 2025 https://notepad-plus-plus.org/news/v881-we-are-with-ukraine/
8.8.2 was June 2025 and has a warning to ignore “false positives” of malware in the update… Ouch. https://notepad-plus-plus.org/news/8.8.2-available-in-1-week-without-certificate/
You might have version 8.8.1 or lower, however it might have tried to order update got the vulnerable package instead and then remained on the older version. I think even if you have the older version that’s not a sign that you weren’t compromised.
Fair point. I was assuming the malicious payload would come along with an update on order to hide, but it’s also possible that the malicious payload was delivered without any update to notepad++.
I’ve not seen any IOCs published have you?
Every version before the previous one.
If you haven’t updated you were not vulnerable to the update hijacking.
So should we at least uninstall our current Notepad++ and then download a new version? What else should we do, the post really doesn’t offer any advice.
In the old post from when the update was released a Heise article is linked, that contains indicators of compromise, and in turn links to Kevin Beaumont for the details of his analysis:
https://lemmy.zip/post/54712916
https://www.heise.de/en/news/Notepad-updater-installed-malware-11109726.html
https://doublepulsar.com/small-numbers-of-notepad-users-reporting-security-woes-371d7a3fd2d9I don’t think you’ll need to uninstall. If I’m reading the article correctly, it looks like they plugged the hole in their update process by switching hosting providers to one that’s even more hardened and secure. So requests from the updater should go to the correct place now and not the state-sponsored hacker.
Then in about a month, the next version of notepad++ that is released will also properly validate/verify any downloaded update files from the server.
You could also just disable the checks for updates from within the application too. Or better yet, use something like winget to handle the updates instead of the built-in updater.
The article literally states that should you download the latest version from their site directly and then use the installer to update manually. Who knows if those who were effected already could have something else compromising the update/install process. I wouldnt update from the built in updater until the new fix with certificate and signature verification is released.
Yes, that’s the safe way. Uninstall, download current version, install. That’s it.
Outside of being compromised already where you would have to notice and fix outside of notepad anyway. But that seems unlikely given the selective attack nature the hoster was able to confirm. If you’d want to cover that you would have to know and do a lot more.
I would just follow their advice, download the newest version from their site directly and use the new versions installer to update manually. I would probably do the same thing when the newest version with certificate and signature verification releases, after that I would assume you should be good to go. However its probably also worth scanning your system for malware just incase you updated during the time frame the attack was live.
So what malware got shipped?
So that’s what the second plus includes….
There were a lot of typos in the linked announcement.
If it was important and true, they would’ve spell-checked.
china isn’t a state they’re a different country and do not belong to the united mexican states.
Son unos puros sonorenses de Mexicali que se les dio por expandir el negocio y se hicieron globales
i don’t speak german. sorry. :(
Ich auch nicht aber doch!
I don’t speak cantonese, either.
Rigatonese only?














