Tag: Salesforce

  • What’s New in Cybersecurity This Week: Projects, Videos, Articles & Podcasts I’m Following – 8/25/25

    What’s New in Cybersecurity This Week: Projects, Videos, Articles & Podcasts I’m Following – 8/25/25

    Welcome to my weekly cybersecurity roundup! Here, I share updates on the projects I’m currently working on, along with the most insightful cybersecurity videos I watched, articles I found valuable, and podcasts I tuned into this week.

    Featured Analysis

    Featured article analysis: Booking.com phishing campaign uses sneaky ‘ん’ character to trick you

    These are two separate but related phishing campaigns that exploit a typographical trick called homoglyphs to deceive victims. In the first instance, threat actors used the Japanese hiragana character (U+3093), which in some fonts looks like a forward slash, to create a fake Booking.com URL. This visual deception makes the malicious domain [suspicious link removed] appear as a subdirectory of the legitimate booking.com, tricking users into believing they are on a genuine site. The link then redirects victims to a malicious MSI installer that drops malware, such as infostealers or remote access trojans, onto their computers. This tactic is a sophisticated form of a homograph attack, and it demonstrates how attackers leverage the visual similarities between characters from different alphabets to execute social engineering campaigns.

    The second campaign targeting Intuit users employs a simpler yet equally effective homoglyph trick. Attackers used a lowercase Latin L to impersonate the letter i, creating the lookalike domain Lntuit.com to mimic the legitimate Intuit.com. This visual substitution is especially effective on mobile devices and in certain fonts where the two characters are nearly indistinguishable, preying on users’ tendency to glance quickly at URLs rather than scrutinize them. The email directs victims to a phishing page designed to steal credentials. Both the Booking.com and Intuit campaigns underscore a growing trend where attackers are creatively manipulating typography to bypass traditional security awareness, highlighting the vulnerability of visual inspection as a sole defense against phishing.

    These attacks serve as a critical reminder that cybersecurity threats are constantly evolving, particularly in the realm of social engineering. The use of homoglyphs and homograph attacks demonstrates a move beyond simple fake emails to highly deceptive links that are difficult to spot. The article emphasizes the need for a multi-layered defense strategy, including user education on how to properly inspect URLs—by hovering over links and identifying the true registered domain—and maintaining up-to-date endpoint security software. While these measures offer protection, the campaigns also illustrate the limitations of relying on visual cues alone and reinforce the importance of robust technological solutions to combat increasingly sophisticated phishing tactics.

    Projects

    Articles

    Podcasts

  • What’s New in Cybersecurity This Week: Projects, Videos, Articles & Podcasts I’m Following – 8/18/25

    What’s New in Cybersecurity This Week: Projects, Videos, Articles & Podcasts I’m Following – 8/18/25

    Welcome to my weekly cybersecurity roundup! Here, I share updates on the projects I’m currently working on, along with the most insightful cybersecurity videos I watched, articles I found valuable, and podcasts I tuned into this week.

    Featured Analysis

    Featured article analysis: HR giant Workday discloses data breach after Salesforce attack

    Workday, a major human resources software provider, has disclosed a data breach stemming from a social engineering attack that compromised a third-party customer relationship management (CRM) platform. While Workday explicitly stated that its core customer tenants and their sensitive data were not affected, the breach exposed business contact information, including names, email addresses, and phone numbers of customers. This type of information, though not directly sensitive, is crucial for threat actors to execute more sophisticated social engineering or phishing campaigns against Workday’s extensive client base, which includes over 60% of Fortune 500 companies.

    Further investigation revealed that the Workday incident is part of a broader series of attacks orchestrated by the notorious ShinyHunters extortion group. These attacks specifically target Salesforce CRM instances through social engineering and voice phishing, tricking employees into linking malicious OAuth applications. Once linked, the attackers gain access to and steal company databases, using the stolen data for extortion. This widespread campaign has impacted numerous other high-profile companies, including Adidas, Google, Louis Vuitton, and Chanel, highlighting a significant and ongoing threat to organizations relying on third-party CRM platforms.

    The Workday breach underscores the pervasive and evolving nature of social engineering threats, particularly when they target critical third-party vendors in an organization’s supply chain. Even with robust internal security, a single vulnerability in a partner’s system can expose valuable data that fuels subsequent, more damaging attacks. The involvement of a sophisticated group like ShinyHunters, known for large-scale data theft and extortion, emphasizes the need for continuous employee training on social engineering tactics, multi-factor authentication, and stringent oversight of third-party access to corporate data.

    Projects

    • TryHackMe – JavaScript Essentials – Complete
    • TryHackMe – SQL Fundamentals – In Progress

    Videos

    Articles

    Podcasts