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Password authenticator Okta says hackers stole names and email addresses of all its customer support users

www.businessinsider.com Password authenticator Okta says hackers stole names and email addresses of all its customer support users

The password authenticator said affected users may be subject to phishing or social engineering attacks and advised using multi-factor authentication.

Password authenticator Okta says hackers stole names and email addresses of all its customer support users

Deja vu? Is it Okta? Yes - it is Okta!

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  • This is the best summary I could come up with:


    The password authenticator was hit by a cyberattack in September and said earlier this month that just 1% of its customers were affected.

    David Bradbury, Okta's chief security officer, said in the post: "While we do not have direct knowledge or evidence that this information is being actively exploited, there is a possibility that the threat actor may use this information to target Okta customers via phishing or social engineering attacks."

    Bradbury advised all customers to use multi-factor authentication, which requires more than one security test, to keep their information safe online.

    San Francisco-based Okta offers companies identity management tools including single sign-in and multi-factor authentication for secure website logins.

    The company has more than 18,000 corporate clients including FedEx, S&P Global, T-Mobile and Zoom, per its website.

    Then in August hacking group Scatter Swine gained access to Okta customer data, it claimed in a blog post, breaching more than 100 companies including software firm Twilio.Okta didn't immediately respond to a request for comment from Business Insider, made outside normal working hours.


    The original article contains 249 words, the summary contains 172 words. Saved 31%. I'm a bot and I'm open source!