The CEO of LastPass sent a voice message to an employee via WhatsApp. Luckily it didn’t crash
Identity theft through audio and even video deepfakes is becoming a new nightmare for companies.
Lately, we’ve been hearing more and more news about how technology that allows people to create audio and video impersonations is being used not only to create new and controversial music hits, but also to commit dangerous scams and scams. LastPass knows this well.
fake voice. In a post on the company’s official blog, those responsible for LastPass described how someone used voice cloning technology to impersonate the voice of the company’s CEO and then try to fool one of its employees.
Hello, I’m your CEO. The events took place last week when an employee suddenly received calls, text messages, and voice calls from a person posing as LastPass CEO Karim Tubba.
The employee did not fall into the trap. Fortunately, the employee realized that all these attempts were very suspicious. In the LastPass blog, they explain that this caused the employee to “ignore the messages” and then report the incident to the internal security team.
The CEO was in a hurry. Not only was it strange that the CEO was communicating directly with this employee, but there was also an urgent tone to the voice that made everything even more suspicious: this “forced urgency,” as those in charge of LastPass say, was another sign that that this type of communication was suspicious and could be a scam.
Voice deepfakes are becoming increasingly popular. LastPass experts recalled how a few weeks ago, an employee of a Hong Kong company paid $25 million to a scammer who impersonated not only the CEO, but also other colleagues. This case became an example of how far such deception can go.
And more and more dangerous. This company has already suffered a dangerous cyber attack in 2022: a cybercriminal infiltrated the company with a completely legitimate position for several months, and then obtained a large amount of data from LastPass users. This company is an obvious target for hackers because millions of users store passwords there to access all kinds of services.
Image | Dylan Ferreira
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