Social Engineering: 

Pretexting and Impersonation


Pretexting is a form of social engineering where a criminal creates a fictional backstory that is used to manipulate someone into providing private information or to influence behavior. Criminals will often impersonate a person of authority, co-worker, or trusted organization to engage in back-and-forth communication prior to launching a targeted spear phishing attack against their victim. Criminals conduct extensive research on a target in order to create a credible story to help build rapport and establish trust.

To help establish credibility, criminals will use leaked personal information from previously disclosed data breaches, as well as the Internet to learn about their potential victims. Some things criminals may use to establish credibility in a pretexting attack is the target’s job title, office location, work history, business relationships, and personal information such as home address, phone number, date of birth, last 4-digits of a social security number or credit card.

Use the following tips to ensure that you do not fall victim to a pretexting social engineering attack:

Example of a Pretexting Social Engineering Attack