Cloudflare employees were recently targeted by a “sophisticated” cyberattack, and even though some fell for the scheme, the DDoS protection company managed to successfully defend itself. 

In a blog post(opens in new tab), Cloudflare co-founder Matthew Prince, together with team members Daniel Stinson-Diess and Sourov Zaman, explained how the attack happened and what made the difference between success and failure.

The threat actor made a couple of key preparations ahead of the attack: they registered a domain that looked legitimate and would fool many victims: cloudflare-okta.com. Okta is Cloudflare’s identity provider. They also managed to somehow obtain the phone numbers of almost 80 Cloudflare employees, as well as family members for some.


More

PCMag: X Now Supports Passkey Login on iOS

X (previously known as Twitter) will now let its users login with a passkey instead of a…

Read More →

TechCrunch: X adds support for passkeys on iOS after removing SMS 2FA support last year

X, formerly known as Twitter, has introduced support for passkeys, a secure login method for…

Read More →

Computer Weekly: Thanks to AI tools, attackers also have an easy time of it

Instead of fighting AI with AI, it’s time for companies to rewrite the rules and…

Read More →


Subscribe to the FIDO newsletter

Stay Connected, Stay Engaged

Receive the latest news, events, research and implementation guidance from the FIDO Alliance. Learn about digital identity and fast, phishing-resistant authentication with passkeys.