In addition to obtaining the employee's password, the scammer was able to download a copy of a customer contact list from the unsuspecting Salesforce.com employee. The list included customer first and last names, company names, e-mail addresses, telephone numbers, and other data.
"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 in a statement.
DMNews.com reports that some of Salessforce.com's customers have fallen victim to the scam and have provide3d their passwords to the criminals as well. 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.
In the letter that Salesforce.com sent to its customers, the company noted that online criminals have been sending customers fake invoices, viruses, and key logging software. The e-mails were sent using information that was illegally obtained from Salesforce.com.
Salesforce.com has reported the phishing crime to law enforcement officials and is recommending that customers implement a number of security measures to protect themselves and their data.
Salesforce.com suggests that its users follow these steps to implement and insure security:
Modify your Salesforce implementation to activate IP range restrictions. This will allow users to access Salesforce only from your corporate network or VPN, thus providing a second factor of authentication.You can read the letter that Salesforce.com sent to its to users.
AccountingWEB.com Nov-8-2007
Categories: AW.com Excel Zone Technology, News Archives
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