Cisco Systems has confirmed that a sophisticated voice phishing (vishing) attack led to the theft of basic profile information for a subset of users on its Cisco.com platform.
The company immediately contained the breach and launched an investigation, determining that only non-sensitive account metadata was accessed. No customer proprietary data, passwords, or product systems were affected.
On July 24, 2025 (GMT+9), Cisco was alerted to unauthorized activity in one instance of a third-party, cloud-based Customer Relationship Management (CRM) system used by the company.
The breach was initiated when a threat actor employed a vishing technique—calling and impersonating a trusted contact—to trick a Cisco representative into revealing authentication credentials.
Once authenticated, the attacker accessed the CRM environment and exported profile records.
Cisco’s forensics team swiftly revoked the compromised credentials and disabled the malicious session.
The rapid response ensured no further exfiltration could occur. Cisco also confirmed that other CRM instances and its internal systems remained secure throughout the incident.
The investigation revealed that the attacker obtained only basic account profile data for users who had registered for Cisco.com accounts. The exported information included:
Crucially, the breach did not compromise any sensitive information such as passwords, payment details, or confidential customer and partner data.
Cisco emphasized that no proprietary or internal corporate data was exposed, and there was no evidence of product or service disruptions as a consequence of this event.
Affected individuals have been notified where required by applicable data protection regulations. Cisco has also reported the incident to relevant supervisory authorities and is cooperating fully with ongoing inquiries.
In response to the vishing incident, Cisco is implementing several security enhancements to fortify defenses against social engineering attacks:
Cisco’s Chief Security Officer remarked, “While we regret that any user data was exposed, our swift containment and transparent communication prioritizes customer trust.
This incident underscores the persistent threat of social engineering, and we are committed to learning from it and bolstering our defenses.”
Customers and partners seeking more information or assistance are encouraged to contact their dedicated Cisco account teams. Cisco reiterated its apology for any inconvenience or concern and reaffirmed its dedication to safeguarding user information and maintaining operational integrity.
Find this Story Interesting! Follow us on LinkedIn and X to Get More Instant Updates.
PortSwigger has leveled up Burp Suite's scanning arsenal with the latest Active Scan++ extension, version…
Unit 42 researchers at Palo Alto Networks exposed serious flaws in the Model Context Protocol…
Polish police have arrested three Ukrainian men traveling through Europe and seized a cache of…
Google has launched its most significant Chrome update ever, embedding Gemini AI across the browser…
Attackers exploit this vulnerability through the router's web interface components, specifically "cgibin" and "hnap_main," by…
Security researchers have uncovered a severe flaw in Apache Tika, a popular open-source toolkit for…