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.
Okta is an identity and access management platform whose authentication services affect account security, access control, and breach response.
Search across headline titles and summaries.
Background for this topic.
Okta is a cloud identity and access management platform used to authenticate people, issue access to applications, and administer workforce or customer identities. Its capabilities commonly include single sign-on, multifactor authentication, directory and lifecycle management, and policy-based authorization across SaaS, on-premises, and custom applications.
Because Okta can control access to many systems, its administrator accounts, identity APIs, integrations, and authentication sessions are high-value security surfaces. Organizations should apply least privilege, phishing-resistant MFA where feasible, careful separation of administrative roles, and prompt removal of departing users; misconfigured federation or provisioning can otherwise grant excessive or persistent access. Logs covering administrator activity, authentication events, token use, and changes to applications or policies support detection and incident response. Security advisories and vulnerability assessments should include Okta agents, connectors, browser components, and downstream integrations, while investigations should consider revoking sessions and rotating affected credentials.
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.
Identity and access management company Okta released a warning about social engineering attacks targeting IT service desk agents at U.S.-based customers in an attempt to trick them into resetting multi-factor authentication (MFA) for high-privileged users. [...]