Salesforce.com falls for phishing scam, warns customers
By
Robert McMillan
,
IDG News Service
, 11/06/2007
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Salesforce.com is warning customers that they may be the targets of malicious software or phishing scams, after one of its
employees was tricked into divulging a corporate password.
In a note to customers, Salesforce said that online criminals have been sending customers fake invoices and, starting just a few days
ago, viruses and key logging software. The e-mails were sent using information that was illegally obtained from Salesforce.com.
Salesforce.com bills its Web-based CRM (customer relationship management) products as easier to use and maintain than traditional
CRM software, but this latest development underlines the security risks that come with this more open model.
The problems began a few months ago, when a Salesforce.com employee fell for a phishing scam and divulged a company password
that gave attackers access to a customer contact list. With this password, the criminals were able to obtain first and last
names, company names, e-mail addresses and telephone numbers of Salesforce.com customers.
"As a result of this, a small number of our customers began receiving bogus e-mails that looked like Salesforce.com invoices," Salesforce.com said.
Some of those customers then fell victim to the scam and gave up their passwords to the criminals, too. When Salesforce.com
started seeing malicious software being attached to these e-mails, the company decided to issue a general alert to its nearly
1 million subscribers.
According to the Washington Post, Suntrust Banks was one of the customers victimized by this scam.
Salesforce.com is working with law enforcement to resolve the problem, but in the meantime it is recommending that customers
implement a number of security measures in order to cut down on the phisher's chance of succeeding.
Suggested actions include restricting Salesforce.com account access to users who are within the corporate network, phishing
education or the use of stronger authentication techniques to log on to the Salesforce.com servers.
On Tuesday, Salesforce.com declined to comment further on the matter. "Everything that they have to say about it is in this
note," a spokesman with the company's public-relations agency said.
The IDG News Service is a Network World affiliate.
Comments (3)
RE: Salesforce.com falls for phishing scam, warns customersBy Jeff on November 7, 2007, 9:40 amSalesforce also uses a method called spoofing that cause email administers to create holes in their SPAM filter security for their services to work. If you combine...
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Spoofing?By Yad on November 7, 2007, 10:05 am@Jeff: What do you mean by spoofing? Is it in reference to the email headers that Salesforce.com uses? The IP Addresses that they send SMTP traffic from? Have...
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Salesforce phishing possible solutionBy CRM Expert on November 12, 2007, 1:01 pmIf you use Salesforce.com, a company called OutProtect (www.outprotect.com) has a product that secures your downloaded data. The product stops authorized users (or...
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