Alethe Denis exposes tricks that made you fall for that return-to-office survey
A hacker walked into a"very big city" building on a Wednesday morning with no keys to any doors or elevators, determined to steal sensitive data by breaking into both the physical space and the corporate Wi-Fi network.She rode the elevator up to the reception floor without needing a security badge, found the office suite door propped open, walked past a security guard sitting at a desk and straight into a conference room..
But"my most favorite type of social engineering is face-to-face," she admitted. In part, this is because it allows her to live out her dream of becoming an actor."But also it allows me to create really compelling characters, interact with people, and create these more elaborate pretexts." "Because if we could get access to every location where there was a surveillance camera, then we could get into the server room and plant a device, which was the goal of the assessment," she said.
It turned out he was a former Israeli Defense Force red teamer who had also authored a book on covert surveillance and detection. "I have friends and connections at three-letter agencies, and those people are telling me that nation states are turning their attention away from creating deepfakes, and they're going back to more traditional methods of voice phishing over the phone," Denis said.
They also use software-as-a-service products to deliver the phony phishes designed to look like they are coming from a third-party vendor, such as an employee engagement survey provider, or an internal HR or IT person.
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