IN Hackers fooled Cognizant help desk, says Clorox in $380M cyberattack lawsuit - Hope the savings from outsourcing IT were worth it!

By Bill Toulas
July 23, 2025

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Clorox is suing IT giant Cognizant for gross negligence, alleging it enabled a massive August 2023 cyberattack by resetting an employee's password for a hacker without first verifying their identity.

The incident was first made public in September 2023, reportedly carried out by hackers associated with Scattered Spider, who utilized a social engineering attack to breach the company.

The lawsuit says Cognizant provided IT services to Clorox, including service desk support and identity management, which was the point of compromise that led to a devastating and costly cyberattack for the company.

Clorox is a major consumer goods company, best known for household cleaning products, bleach, disinfectants, and personal care items. Cognizant is a global IT services and consulting company, providing cloud services, software development, and cybersecurity.

According to the complaint, from 2013 to 2023, Cognizant was contracted by Clorox to handle its IT operations.

"Cognizant provided the service desk ("Service Desk") that Clorox employees could contact when they needed password recovery or reset assistance," reads the complaint shared with BleepingComputer.

"Cognizant's operation of the Service Desk came with a simple, common-sense requirement: never reset anyone's credentials without properly authenticating them first. Clorox made this easy for Cognizant by providing them with straight-forward procedures to follow whenever providing credential recovery or reset assistance."

However, the complaint alleges that on August 11, 2023, recordings show that a cybercriminal called Cognizant's Service Desk multiple times, pretending to be a Clorox representative requesting password and multi-factor authentication resets.

"At no point during any of the calls did the Agent verify that the caller was in fact Employee 1. At no point did the Agent follow Clorox's credential support procedures—either the pre-2023 procedure or the January 2023 update—before changing the password for the cybercriminal. The Agent further reset Employee 1's MFA credentials multiple times without any identity verification at all. And at no point did the Agent send the required emails to the employee or the employee's manager to alert them of the password reset. "Clorox claims in the complaint.

This type of social engineering attack has become the hallmark of Scattered Spider attacks, recently used in UK retail attacks on Marks & Spencer and Co-op.

After allegedly failing to verify the caller's actual identity, Cognizant reset the credentials and multi-factor authentication (MFA) for the hacker, granting them access to Clorox's IT network.

To make matters worse, Clorox alleges that the threat actors used the same playbook to reset the password and MFA for another employee who worked in IT security, which was done without verification once again. This reportedly gave the attackers privileged access to the network, which they used to spread to further devices.

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Transcript of call between hacker and service desk
Source: Clorox complaint against Cognizant

Clorox states that Cognizant's actions paralyzed its corporate network, halted manufacturing, and caused widespread product shortages and business interruption.

In addition to this, Clorox described Cognizant's response and recovery support as overly incompetent, resulting in delays in the application of containment measures, failure to shut down compromised accounts, and sending underqualified personnel on premises.

"The resulting Cyberattack was debilitating. It paralyzed Clorox's corporate network and crippled business operations," describes the legal complaint.

"And to make matters worse, when Clorox called on Cognizant to provide incident response and disaster recovery support services, Cognizant botched its response and compounded the damage it had already caused."

Clorox's complaint alleges breach of contract due to Cognizant's failure to meet ITSA obligations, breach of good faith and fair dealing, gross negligence, and intentional misrepresentation of staff training on the client's credential reset procedures.

For these actions, which resulted in hundreds of millions of dollars in lost sales due to business disruption, as well as reputational damage with long-term consequences, Clorox is seeking $49 million in direct remediation damages and $380,000,000 in total damages.

BleepingComputer attempted to contact Cognizant for a comment on the lawsuit, but the listed press address was returned with a delivery failure.

Source (Archive)
 

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“It is shocking that a corporation the size of Clorox had such an inept internal cybersecurity system to mitigate this attack,” Cognizant told Cybersecurity Dive in a statement. “Clorox has tried to blame us for these failures, but the reality is that Clorox hired Cognizant for a narrow scope of help desk services which Cognizant reasonably performed. Cognizant did not manage cybersecurity for Clorox.”
Fucking indians blaming the victim for hiring them. To be fair, if Clorox had a decent cybersecurity team, they would have adviced against hiring any indian company or adding an additional mechanism to validate jeets.
 
Fucking indians blaming the victim for hiring them. To be fair, if Clorox had a decent cybersecurity team, they would have adviced against hiring any indian company or adding an additional mechanism to validate jeets.
This is right. Far shoring is a thing that cannot be undone for cost savings purposes but not taking basic protective measure (for example - only send a password reset to the callers manager/sponsor) is 100% on Clorox.
 
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Even though it will lead to a lot of headaches for us plebs, I kind of hope there are more of the Jeet ICT mass failures.

I find it surprising that most of the world's governments allow Microsoft to continually hire Jeets in tech roles.
How that isn't a national security threat I have no idea.
 
Even though it will lead to a lot of headaches for us plebs, I kind of hope there are more of the Jeet ICT mass failures.

I find it surprising that most of the world's governments allow Microsoft to continually hire Jeets in tech roles.
How that isn't a national security threat I have no idea.
Remember that Crowdstrike incident last year? A few more of that sort of costly failure and even the C-suits will have to take notice.
 
You get what you fucking deserve, etc. Now, while this is absolutely some pajeet's fault, the fact of the matter is that most helpdesk people are fairly bottom of the barrel and companies do not even vaguely train them sufficiently for their poor-paying jobs. I routinely encountered helpdesk personnel who were fucking up at least as bad as the idiot in this article, actual employed by the company US citizen helpdesk and not outsourced garbage like Cognizant. Corps are not paying helpdesk wages sufficient to draw in actual skilled professionals; at best they get someone talented but too young and inexperienced to have risen in IT yet, at worst they get someone more suited to being a Walmart cashier. What I've seen most often is that the helpdesk manager or the one beardy senior guy who's been doing the work for thirty years is the one barely holding things together while the people under them are a pile of bumblefucks. Then, because paying $20 an hour is simply intolerable, the company tries to cut down even further by laying off the helpdesk staff and outsourcing it to even worse outfits for less money, at which point they're left with zero competent people.
 
Everyone is hiring jeets. That's what they're banking on: if everyone is incompetent, no one has the advantage.
"Sar I am Mhicrosoft CEO Stevinder Job, please to reset bastard password I am forgetting"
"Okay sar this is Consyumar Services, please to email Apple gift card to pay for reset fees"
 
Justifiable jeet hatred aside, I don't remember ever hearing about Clorox products being out of stock in 2023.
 
Where will these Indian super hackers strike next? Will they go after Charmin or Irish Spring soap? Because they clearly have it out for all things hygiene, as jeets do.

It warms my heart to see H1b farms like Cognizant and greedy corpos that outsourced their IT get what they fucking deserve.
 
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