In the last few days, the encrypted messaging platform, ‘Signal’ confirmed a variety of their customers fell victim to the phishing attack on Twilio. It is estimated that 1,900 were affected by the breach via phone number and SMS verification links to “reset passwords” on a phony Twilio link. By posing as Twilio’s IT dept, the hackers were able to obtain victim’s login credentials. Unfortunately, it is still unclear who was behind this attack. Cloudflare also revealed they were subjected to a phishing attack around the very same time as Twilio, but was not breached as an end result owing to the corporation-vast use of hardware-centered, FIDO2-compliant multi-factor authentication (MFA) keys.


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Forbes: Why MFA Falls Short And What Can Be Done About It

Stu Sjouwerman, founder, and CEO of KnowBe4 Inc shares his thoughts on how MFAs fell…

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ars Technica: Phishers who breached Twilio and targeted Cloudflare could easily get you, too

At least two security-sensitive companies—Twilio and Cloudflare—were targeted in a phishing attack by an advanced…

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TechRadar.pro: Cloudflare says it was almost fooled by a phishing attack

Cloudflare employees were recently targeted by a “sophisticated” cyberattack, and even though some fell for…

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