Microsoft and Cloudflare jointly take down phishing network that stole thousands of Microsoft 365 credentials
By Wayne Williams
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Microsoft and Cloudflare jointly take down phishing network that stole thousands of Microsoft 365 credentials
Wayne Williams
17 September 2025
RaccoonO365 sold phishing kits that copied Microsoft emails, attachments, and websites
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Microsoft and Cloudflare disrupt phishing service stealing Microsoft 365 credentials
RaccoonO365 kits used CAPTCHA screens and fake Microsoft logins
Revenue from the criminal operation estimated to be at least $100,000
Working together, Microsoft’s Digital Crimes Unit and Cloudflare say they have successfully disrupted a phishing service that helped criminals steal thousands of Microsoft 365 usernames and passwords.
Tracked by Microsoft as Storm-2246, RaccoonO365 sold subscription kits that mimicked official Microsoft messages and login pages.
From July 2024, these kits helped criminals steal at least an estimated 5,000 sets of credentials from victims across 94 countries.
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Securing court order
Microsoft identified the group’s leader as Joshua Ogundipe, based in Nigeria, and said the service was marketed on Telegram with hundreds of subscribers.
Microsoft’s Digital Crimes Unit said it seized 338 websites used by the group after securing a court order from the Southern District of New York.
“This case shows that cybercriminals don’t need to be sophisticated to cause widespread harm – simple tools like RaccoonO365 make cybercrime accessible to virtually anyone, putting millions of users at risk,” the company warned.
Cloudflare said its Cloudforce One and Trust and Safety teams worked with Microsoft to dismantle the infrastructure that supported the service.
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According to Cloudflare, the phishing kits used a simple CAPTCHA screen and anti-bot measures to appear legitimate, before redirecting victims to fake Microsoft login pages.
Once credentials were entered, attackers could also bypass multi-factor authentication and steal session cookies.
The company disabled Worker accounts and placed warning pages in front of malicious domains to cut off access.
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Hackers are stealing Microsoft 365 accounts by abusing link-wrapping services
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The phishing service operated on a tiered pricing model, with subscriptions to the “RaccoonO365 Suite” priced at $355 for 30 days or $999 for 90 days, with payments only accepted in cryptocurrency.
Microsoft said the operation had already generated at least $100,000 in revenue, although the true number is likely higher.
Both companies described the action as part of a broader effort to disrupt phishing-as-a-service platforms.
“Our response represents a strategic shift from reactive, single-domain takedowns to a proactive, large-scale disruption,” Cloudflare said, adding, “we aim to significantly increase RaccoonO365’s operational costs and send a clear message to other malicious actors: the free tier is too expensive for criminal enterprises.”
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Wayne Williams
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Wayne Williams is a freelancer writing news for TechRadar Pro. He has been writing about computers, technology, and the web for 30 years. In that time he wrote for most of the UK’s PC magazines, and launched, edited and published a number of them too.
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Hackers are stealing Microsoft 365 accounts by abusing link-wrapping services
Hackers are looking to steal Microsoft logins using some devious new tricks – here’s how to stay safe
Double check your Microsoft 365 and Google accounts – this VoidProxy phishing service is hitting them hard
Amazon says it stopped Russian hackers targeting Microsoft logins as Cozy Bear strikes again
Hackers are using fake Zoom or Microsoft Teams invites to spy on all your workplace activity
Microsoft flags dangerous cybercriminals ransacking organizations – and then letting you know about it via Teams
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