Salesforce Flags Unauthorized Data Access via Gainsight-Linked OAuth Activity

Salesforce has warned of detected “unusual activity” related to Gainsight-published applications connected to the platform. “Our investigation indicates this activity may have enabled unauthorized access to certain customers’ Salesforce data through the app’s connection,” the company said in an advisory. The cloud services firm said it has taken the step of revoking all active access and refresh

Salesforce has warned of detected “unusual activity” related to Gainsight-published applications connected to the platform.

“Our investigation indicates this activity may have enabled unauthorized access to certain customers’ Salesforce data through the app’s connection,” the company said in an advisory.

The cloud services firm said it has taken the step of revoking all active access and refresh tokens associated with Gainsight-published applications connected to Salesforce. It has also temporarily removed those applications from the AppExchange as its investigation continues.

Salesforce did not disclose how many customers were impacted by the incident, but said it has notified them.

DFIR Retainer Services

“There is no indication that this issue resulted from any vulnerability in the Salesforce platform,” the company added. “The activity appears to be related to the app’s external connection to Salesforce.”

Out of an abundance of caution, the Gainsight app has been temporarily pulled from the HubSpot Marketplace. “This may also impact Oauth access for customer connections while the review is taking place,” Gainsight said. “No suspicious activity related to Hubspot has been observed at this point.”

In a post shared on LinkedIn, Austin Larsen, principal threat analyst at Google Threat Intelligence Group (GTIG), described it as an “emerging campaign” targeting Gainsight-published applications connected to Salesforce.

The activity is assessed to be tied to threat actors associated with the ShinyHunters (aka UNC6240) group, mirroring a similar set of attacks targeting Salesloft Drift instances earlier this August.

According to DataBreaches.Net, ShinyHunters has confirmed the campaign is their doing and stated that the Salesloft and Gainsight attack waves allowed them to steal data from nearly 1000 organizations.

Interestingly, Gainsight previously said it was also one of the Salesloft Drift customers impacted in the previous attack. But it’s not clear at this stage if the earlier breach played a role in the current incident.

CIS Build Kits

In that hack, the attackers accessed business contact details for Salesforce-related content, including names, business email addresses, phone numbers, regional/location details, product licensing information, and support case contents (without attachments).

“Adversaries are increasingly targeting the OAuth tokens of trusted third-party SaaS integrations,” Larsen pointed out.

In light of the malicious activity, organizations are advised to review all third-party applications connected to Salesforce, revoke tokens for unused or suspicious applications, and rotate credentials if anomalies are flagged from an integration.

Found this article interesting? Follow us on Google News, Twitter and LinkedIn to read more exclusive content we post.

 The Hacker News 

Total
0
Shares
Previous Post

Salesforce cuts off access to third-party app after discovering ‘unusual activity’

Next Post

SEC Drops SolarWinds Case After Years of High-Stakes Cybersecurity Scrutiny

Related Posts

From HealthKick to GOVERSHELL: The Evolution of UTA0388’s Espionage Malware

A China-aligned threat actor codenamed UTA0388 has been attributed to a series of spear-phishing campaigns targeting North America, Asia, and Europe that are designed to deliver a Go-based implant known as GOVERSHELL. "The initially observed campaigns were tailored to the targets, and the messages purported to be sent by senior researchers and analysts from legitimate-sounding, completely
Read More

ComicForm and SectorJ149 Hackers Deploy Formbook Malware in Eurasian Cyberattacks

Organizations in Belarus, Kazakhstan, and Russia have emerged as the target of a phishing campaign undertaken by a previously undocumented hacking group called ComicForm since at least April 2025. The activity primarily targeted industrial, financial, tourism, biotechnology, research, and trade sectors, cybersecurity company F6 said in an analysis published last week. The attack chain involves
Read More