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Salesforce.com customer list stolen
Posted by Mike Snyder on November 7, 2007 |Just one more thing customers need to consider before moving all of their critical customer data online...how much do you trust the company hosting your data?
Salesforce.com customer list stolen
Robert McMillan, IDG News Service
07 November 2007Salesforce.com's customers are targets of malicious hackers and scammers, after an employee was tricked into handing a corporate password to a phisher.
In a note to customers, Salesforce said that criminals have been sending customers fake invoices and, starting just a few days ago, viruses and key logging software. The emails were sent using information that was illegally obtained from Salesforce.com.
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, email addresses and telephone numbers of Salesforce.com customers.
"As a result of this, a small number of our customers began receiving bogus emails that looked like Salesforce.com invoices," Salesforce.com said.
Some of those customers also fell for the scam and gave up their passwords too. When Salesforce.com started seeing malicious software being attached to these emails, 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 victimised by this scam.
Jan Sabelstrom noticed that something was amiss when an email purporting to be from the US Federal Trade Commission landed in his inbox. This attack contained information about one of his company's customers that would have been available to Salesforce.com, but not the public at large, he said.
Sabelstrom, managing director of CaSa Customer Solutions, a Chicago-based CRM consultancy, said he emailed Salesforce employees, including CEO Marc Benioff, about the message on the same day last week that Salesforce.com notified its customers of the problem.
"I basically shot them an email saying... I would like to understand how this came to be," he said. "It seems a little bit dubious to me that there's this connection between me and my customers."
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Seems like a company in the hosted CRM business should be a bit more careful about customer information!
Posted by: Craig Klein | Nov 8, 2007 9:07:30 AM