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Slack is a workplace messaging platform whose integrations, permissions, and exposed data can affect organizational security and privacy.

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Slack is a hosted collaboration platform for workplace channels, direct messages, file sharing, and integrations with other services. It is security-relevant because workspaces can contain confidential discussions, credentials, personal data, and operational documents. Unauthorized account access, overly broad channel or guest permissions, and accidental external sharing can expose that content; retention settings may also determine how much information remains available after an incident.

Key attack surfaces include identity and session controls, OAuth applications, bots, webhooks, APIs, and Slack’s desktop, mobile, and browser clients. Security teams should enforce strong authentication, review app permissions and tokens, restrict external access, patch clients, and use audit logs and appropriate retention or data-loss controls. Advisories about client or API vulnerabilities should be assessed for affected versions, required access, and potential reach into workspace data. Investigations may need to examine application tokens, integration activity, and audit records as well as user credentials.

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Nowadays, sensitive and critical data is traveling in everyday business channels that offer only the basic level of security and encryption, and companies are often oblivious to the risk. A case in point: Disney suffered a devastating data leak by a hacktivist group known as NullBulge that got hold of over 1.2 terabytes of data from Disney's internal Slack messaging channels. The breach exposed