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Sead Fadilpašić

Security bug could have allowed anyone to spoof Microsoft employee emails

Best email services: image of email with one unread message alert.

Security researchers recently claimed to have found a flaw that could allow threat actors to spoof Microsoft corporate emails.

A cybersecurity researcher with the alias Slonser (full name Vsevolod Kokorin, according to TechCrunch) recently posted on X with a telling screenshot that appeared to show an email seemingly coming from the security@microsoft.com email address. 

In the post, Slonser said that after tipping off Microsoft about the vulnerability, the company came back saying it couldn’t reproduce it. In other words - it didn’t find it relevant. The researcher then shared “a video with the exploitation, a full PoC” to which Microsoft, yet again, responded by saying it was unable to reproduce the flaw.

Large attack surface

“At this point, I decided to stop the communication with Microsoft,” Slonser said, and just posted his findings on the internet.

His post “blew up”, raking in more than 118,000 views at press time. The researcher later suggested to TechCrunch that Microsoft may have had a change of heart: “Microsoft might have noticed my tweet because a few hours ago they reopen [sic] one of my reports that I had submitted several months ago.”

The vulnerability apparently only works on Outlook accounts, which are still some 400 million users. So, the attack surface is fairly large. By spoofing major brands such as Microsoft, threat actors could create convincing and highly dangerous phishing emails, so the threat coming from this vulnerability is real.

However, it is currently unknown if Slonser was the first one to find it, or if someone else already discovered it and abused it in attacks.

Microsoft has recently been put on a pillar of shame, after a series of security mishaps which resulted in Chinese threat actors reading emails belonging to high ranking US government employees. As a result, Microsoft announced a full overhaul of its security practices, and claimed to have placed cybersecurity “above all else”.

Via TechCrunch

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