Hackers Target High-Privileged Okta Accounts via Help Desk
Threat actors convince employees to reset MFA for Super Admin accounts in the IAM service to leverage compromised accounts, impersonating users and moving laterally within an organization.
Impersonation attacks mimic trusted people or services to trick users into sharing credentials, sending money, or bypassing security controls.
Search across headline titles and summaries.
Background for this topic.
Impersonation is the deliberate presentation of a person, organization, account, device, or service as another trusted identity. In information security, attackers use stolen credentials, look-alike domains, caller-ID or email spoofing, forged messages, and social engineering to persuade users or systems to accept that false identity. The aim may be account takeover, unauthorized access, fraudulent transactions, or disclosure of sensitive information.
Impersonation commonly targets identity providers, email and messaging systems, help desks, executives, suppliers, and customer-support channels. Useful controls include phishing-resistant multi-factor authentication, least-privilege access, email authentication and domain monitoring, and independent verification of unusual requests—especially changes to payment details or credentials. Detection and response depend on examining authentication logs, device and session context, reported fraudulent messages, and newly registered look-alike domains; compromised accounts should be revoked or reset promptly and impersonated parties notified where appropriate.
Threat actors convince employees to reset MFA for Super Admin accounts in the IAM service to leverage compromised accounts, impersonating users and moving laterally within an organization.
X, the social media site formerly known as Twitter, has updated its privacy policy to collect users’ biometric data to tackle fraud and impersonation on the platform