As businesses strengthen their internal cybersecurity defenses, cybercriminals are increasingly shifting their focus to a more vulnerable target—the digital supply chain. Rather than attempting to breach organizations directly, attackers are exploiting trusted third-party vendors, software providers, cloud services, and open-source components that already have authorized access to critical systems and sensitive data.
Traditional cybersecurity strategies have long emphasized protecting internal networks through firewalls, encryption, access controls, and employee awareness programs. However, the growing reliance on interconnected digital ecosystems means these measures alone are no longer enough. Organizations now depend on a broad network of suppliers and technology partners, creating multiple entry points that hackers can exploit.
How Digital Supply Chain Attacks Work
Instead of targeting businesses head-on,
cybercriminals increasingly infiltrate suppliers and service providers that support an organization's operations. These may include software vendors, web development companies, cloud storage providers, testing platforms, or third-party integrations.
A supply chain attack typically compromises one or more components that organizations rely on to deliver products or services. Attackers may introduce malicious software updates, steal login credentials, exploit insecure integrations, or take advantage of vulnerable open-source software libraries.
Open-source components present a particularly significant risk. Software developers often integrate publicly available libraries into applications to accelerate development. If attackers successfully insert malicious code into these widely used components, every organization that later incorporates them into their software may unknowingly introduce a serious security vulnerability.
One notable example occurred in 2024, when malicious code was embedded into XZ Utils, a widely used open-source compression utility for Linux systems. Rather than directly hacking organizations, attackers compromised the software supply chain itself. Although the affected versions had not yet reached widespread production deployment, they had already been integrated into development versions of major Linux distributions, forcing maintainers to rebuild packages after the vulnerability was identified.
Computer scientist Alex Stamos warned that if the attack had gone unnoticed, it would have “given its creators a master key to any of the hundreds of millions of computers around the world that run SSH”.
Once attackers successfully compromise a supplier's products or services, they can use that trusted access to infiltrate customer environments. In many cases, these attacks remain undetected until operations are disrupted, sensitive information is stolen or encrypted, or ransomware demands are issued. The XZ Utils compromise itself was only uncovered after a developer noticed unusual system performance during routine testing.
By the time organizations discover such incidents, significant operational and financial damage has often already occurred.
Cyberattacks frequently result in substantial financial losses. Organizations may face costly ransom demands, especially when attackers recognize that disruptions affect multiple customers or essential business services.
Even when no ransom is paid, businesses incur significant expenses related to operational downtime, system restoration, cybersecurity investigations, legal support, and business recovery.
For companies operating primarily through digital platforms, even short periods of downtime can severely impact revenue. Following a cyberattack in 2025, retailer Co-op reported that the incident “impacted both financial and operational areas”, leading to at least £206 million in lost revenue.
Operational disruptions can be equally damaging. If a critical supplier suspends services while containing a cyber incident, organizations may lose access to essential systems, preventing order fulfillment, transaction processing, and other core business functions.
A major example occurred in 2025 when Marks & Spencer (M&S) temporarily suspended online orders for nearly two months and relied on manual processing following a cyberattack. Rather than directly targeting M&S infrastructure, attackers exploited vulnerabilities in MoveIt, a widely used enterprise file transfer platform.
The breach exposed sensitive employee and customer information, including contact details, payroll records, and in certain cases, National Insurance numbers. Although payment information was reportedly unaffected, the scale of the incident triggered formal investigations, internal reviews, and regulatory scrutiny from the Information Commissioner's Office (ICO). The retailer estimated the financial impact at approximately £300 million in lost profits.
Beyond financial losses, reputational harm often proves to be the most enduring consequence of supply chain cyberattacks.
Customers generally do not distinguish between an organization and its suppliers when services fail. Regardless of where the breach originated, customers typically hold the business responsible.
Poor communication or delayed responses following an incident can rapidly erode trust that may have taken years to build. Restoring customer confidence often requires significant investment in communication, service improvements, and strengthened security measures, while long-term effects on customer loyalty and commercial relationships may continue long after systems have recovered.
Growing Regulatory Expectations
Regulators worldwide are increasingly emphasizing digital supply chain resilience as cyber risks extend beyond internal IT environments.
Under the UK's implementation of the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) through the Data Protection Act 2018, organizations acting as data controllers remain responsible for protecting personal information, even when third-party providers process that data on their behalf.
This means organizations must ensure their suppliers implement appropriate technical and organizational security measures while also reporting data breaches without unnecessary delay. Failure to meet these obligations can result in regulatory enforcement, financial penalties, and reputational damage.
The EU Artificial Intelligence Act follows a similar principle for AI technologies. Organizations deploying AI systems—including those supplied by external vendors—are expected to understand how those systems function, the associated cybersecurity risks, and how they are secured, particularly when high-risk AI applications are involved.
As a result, regulators increasingly expect businesses to actively manage cyber and AI risks throughout their digital supply chains rather than relying solely on vendor assurances.
Organizations are therefore encouraged to establish comprehensive cybersecurity governance frameworks that include supplier due diligence, continuous monitoring, documented risk management processes, and clearly defined incident response procedures.
Best Practices to Reduce Supply Chain Cyber Risks
While eliminating supply chain risk entirely is impossible, organizations can significantly reduce exposure by adopting proactive security measures, including:
- Performing comprehensive cybersecurity due diligence before engaging suppliers.
- Verifying vendors maintain strong security controls such as patch management, employee training, access management, and multi-factor authentication.
- Conducting regular risk assessments across the supply chain to identify critical vulnerabilities.
- Including clear cybersecurity obligations, incident reporting requirements, liability provisions, audit rights, and data protection clauses within supplier contracts.
- Thoroughly testing systems and software developed by external vendors before deployment.
- Providing guidance and collaboration to strengthen cybersecurity across supplier networks.
- Developing and regularly updating incident response plans that specifically address third-party cyber incidents, customer communications, regulatory reporting, and ransomware scenarios.
- Promoting cybersecurity awareness through continuous education and information sharing among internal teams and external partners.
- Investing in cyber insurance while ensuring key suppliers also maintain appropriate coverage.
As organizations become increasingly dependent on interconnected technologies, digital platforms, and external suppliers, cybersecurity has evolved into a broader governance challenge rather than simply an IT responsibility.
Recent cyber incidents demonstrate how weaknesses within trusted supplier networks can rapidly escalate into severe financial losses, operational disruptions, and long-term reputational damage.
Regulators now expect organizations to proactively identify, assess, and manage supply chain cyber risks before incidents occur. Businesses that invest in stronger supplier oversight, robust governance, and comprehensive risk management strategies will be better positioned to safeguard operations, meet regulatory obligations, and preserve customer trust in an increasingly connected digital landscape.