Attackers Break Into Twilio Customer Data Via Phishing Attack

August 9, 2022

Cloud communications company Twilio has confirmed a data breach in which attackers stole customer data via a text message phishing attack.

According to the company, the attackers gained access to its systems after tricking and stealing the credentials of several employees.

To carry out the attack, the threat actors impersonated Twilio’s IT department and asked them to click on URLs with “Twillo,” “Okta,” and “SSO” keywords. Twilio’s employees were tricked into clicking on the embedded links after being warned that their passwords had expired and needed to be changed.

“The text messages originated from U.S. carrier networks. We worked with the U.S. carriers to shut down the actors and worked with the hosting providers serving the malicious URLs to shut those accounts down,” Twilio said.

While the attackers are yet to be identified, the company said the problem has been reported to law enforcement and investigations are ongoing.

Twilio has revoked the employee accounts compromised during the attack in order to block the attackers from accessing its systems.

“As the threat actors were able to access a limited number of accounts’ data, we have been notifying the affected customers on an individual basis with the details,” Twilio said.

The sources for this piece include an article in BleepingComputer.

Top Stories

Related Articles

February 11, 2026 Workday’s CEO Carl Eschenbach is stepping down, less than a week after the enterprise software firm announced more...

February 11, 2026 OpenAI is losing several senior-level researchers and executives as it redirects resources toward its flagship ChatGPT product, more...

February 10, 2026 Canada is about to make history in the race for clean energy by taking a homegrown fusion more...

February 9, 2026 Waymo acknowledged recently that human workers, including contractors operating from overseas, still play a direct role in more...

Jim Love

Jim is an author and podcast host with over 40 years in technology.

Share:
Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn