Two-factor authentication is an additional layer of security on top of the username and password. It makes it harder for attackers to gain access to personal devices or accounts.
KnowBe4 Cheif Hacking Officer Kevin Mitnick demonstrates the phishing attack with a fake email that pretends to be from Linkedin, but the email actually comes from the typosquatted domain llnked[.]com.
The attack looks simple: whenever a user receives a new connection request on LinkedIn, they will be notified with an email, By clickinginterested, they will be taken to the LinkedIn account.
Instead of redirecting to Linkedin it redirects to the phishing domain llnked[.]com and asks to fill in the login credentials.
After entering credentials, it triggers the 2FA check, In the same period of time, the attacker can see the victim’s username, password, and session cookie in a separate window.
Once the victim enter’s the 6 digit authentication code, it creates a session cookie that allows secure access to the site.
In the meantime, an attacker can intercept the session cookie, which can be used by an attacker to log in with the victim’s account without entering account credentials.
Now the attacker needs to visit the real LinkedIn website, inject a session cookie via developer tools, and simply hit refresh to get logged in with the victim’s account.
It’s not the first time 2FA has been hacked, says Stu Sjouwerman, founder, and CEO of KnowBe4. “There are at least ten different ways to bypass two-factor authentication,” he explains in an interview with Dark Reading.
Sjouwerman says that anti-phishing education is really important if the victim is a security-savvy hacker like this, which is impossible to complete.
White hat hacker Kuba Gretzky developed the Advanced Phishing with Two-Factor Authentication Bypass tool dubbed Evilginx. He also published a blog post explaining it’s implementation.
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