City
Epaper

Credential theft surges as Indian IT firms see 265.52 mn detections: Report

By IANS | Updated: May 4, 2026 13:15 IST

New Delhi, May 4 With 265.52 million detections across over 8 million endpoints, credential theft and identity compromise ...

Open in App

New Delhi, May 4 With 265.52 million detections across over 8 million endpoints, credential theft and identity compromise has emerged as a primary entry point for large‑scale cyberattacks against Indian IT firms, a report said on Monday.

The report from Seqrite said the enterprise security arm of Quick Heal Technologies Limited said the threat ecosystem is characterised by continuous, automated attack activity, as India’s IT sector has become a high-value target for credential theft and identity compromise.

Stolen login credentials, increasingly traded and weaponised on the dark web, are emerging as one of the most effective entry points for large-scale cyberattacks, the report noted.

Such a modus operandi enables attackers to move laterally, escalate privileges and carry out data exfiltration or ransomware campaigns.

Seqrite has identified a growing concentration of credential theft attempts targeting Indian IT firms, driven by their access to global systems, intellectual property, and interconnected enterprise networks.

Trojans accounted for nearly 43 per cent of detections and often act as the primary payload for harvesting login information. Attackers combine phishing, malware and compromised applications to capture credentials that are then circulated on dark‑web marketplaces, the firm said.

The report warned that India’s IT firms are particularly exposed due to their extensive use of cloud platforms, remote access systems, and third-party integrations. A single compromised credential can provide access to multiple environments, significantly amplifying the potential impact.

Under the Digital Personal Data Protection Act, 2023, organisations are responsible for protecting personal and sensitive data. Credential compromise can therefore trigger breaches involving customer information, employee records, and intellectual property, triggering compliance failures and financial penalties.

The report urged an identity‑first security framework, where organisations must implement zero‑trust frameworks, enforce multi‑factor authentication across all access points and monitor credential exposure beyond organisational boundaries.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

InternationalIndian submarine INS Sindhukesari arrives in Colombo for operational turnaround

EntertainmentKajal Aggarwal tells Vijay: This isn’t just a win, it’s a celebration of a deep, powerful connection with millions!

NationalSringeri recounting row: K'taka cops file FIR against victorious BJP candidate, 2 others

NationalK'taka BJP leaders celebrate Bengal, Assam performance; say PM Modi ensures national security

InternationalReviewing US peace proposal to end war: Iran

Technology Realted Stories

TechnologyDiversified incomes, irrigation to shield India’s agri sector from El Niño: Report

TechnologyAmbuja Cements clocks record quarterly revenue of Rs 10,915 crore in Jan-March

TechnologyDRDO passed on 2,200 technologies in big push to defence production: Rajnath Singh

TechnologyGoogle opens applications for third Google Play Accelerator India cohort

TechnologyAther Energy's Q4 loss widens sequentially to Rs 100.23 crore