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Home»News»LastPass Warns of Fake Maintenance Messages Targeting Users’ Master Passwords
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LastPass Warns of Fake Maintenance Messages Targeting Users’ Master Passwords

Team-CWDBy Team-CWDJanuary 27, 2026No Comments3 Mins Read
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LastPass is alerting users to a new active phishing campaign that’s impersonating the password management service, which aims to trick users into giving up their master passwords.

The campaign, which began on or around January 19, 2026, involves sending phishing emails claiming upcoming maintenance and urging them to create a local backup of their password vaults in the next 24 hours. The messages, LastPass said, come with the following subject lines –

  • LastPass Infrastructure Update: Secure Your Vault Now
  • Your Data, Your Protection: Create a Backup Before Maintenance
  • Don’t Miss Out: Backup Your Vault Before Maintenance
  • Important: LastPass Maintenance & Your Vault Security
  • Protect Your Passwords: Backup Your Vault (24-Hour Window)

The emails are designed to steer unsuspecting users to a phishing site (“group-content-gen2.s3.eu-west-3.amazonaws[.]com/5yaVgx51ZzGf”) that then redirects to the domain “mail-lastpass[.]com.”

The company emphasized that it will never ask users for their master passwords and that it’s working with third-party partners to take the malicious infrastructure down. It has also shared the email addresses from which the messages originate –

  • support@sr22vegas[.]com
  • support@lastpass[.]server8
  • support@lastpass[.]server7
  • support@lastpass[.]server3

“This campaign is designed to create a false sense of urgency, which is one of the most common and effective tactics we see in phishing attacks, a spokesperson for the Threat Intelligence, Mitigation, and Escalation (TIME) team at LastPass told The Hacker News in a statement.

“We want customers and the broader security community to be aware that LastPass will never ask for their master password or demand immediate action under a tight deadline. We thank our customers for staying vigilant and continuing to report suspicious activity.”

LastPass told The Hacker News that it’s not aware of how many customers were targeted, and that there is no indication, at this time, that any accounts were compromised. It also said the use of widely available infrastructure has complicated attribution efforts, but noted that the “overall tactics and broad customer targeting aligns closest with cybercriminal groups.”

The development comes months after LastPass cautioned users of an information-stealing campaign targeting Apple macOS users through fake GitHub repositories that distribute malware-laced programs masquerading as the password manager and other popular software.

Update

LastPass said it has observed a fresh round of emails as of January 22, 2026, using similar tactics, but changing the URLs after the initial infrastructure was taken down. The new indicators of compromise (IoCs) are listed below –

Phishing sites:

  • systems-resources.s3.eu-west-3.amazonaws[.]com/sSvLaIvIEm5iMal
  • security-lastpass[.]com

Subject Lines:

  • LastPass Server Maintenance: Backup Recommended
  • LastPass Maintenance Scheduled: Here’s What You Need to Do
  • Critical: Please Backup Your LastPass Vault Before Maintenance
  • LastPass Infrastructure Update: Secure Your Vault Now
  • LastPass Maintenance: Secure Your Data Today
  • Important: LastPass Maintenance & Your Vault Security



Source

computer security cyber attacks cyber news cyber security news cyber security news today cyber security updates cyber updates data breach hacker news hacking news how to hack information security network security ransomware malware software vulnerability the hacker news
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