Odido has fallen victim to a major cyber attack. Data from millions of customers is on the street and is therefore in the hands of hackers and other malicious parties. In short: phishing that you know is coming!
Banks, online services, WeTransfer, housing network, Vattenfall, tax authorities, McAfee, Rabo, ABN AMRO, Apple, Chamber of Commerce, Trade Register, Government, DigiD, Netflix, BOL.com, Zilveren Kruis, Vewin, cloud storage, telephone providers, Facebook, credit cards, Interpol, PostNL, WhatsApp, the Netherlands Enterprise Agency, SMS, MijnOverheid, Facebook… no company, service or institution escapes attempts by criminals to defraud customers of (a lot of) money.
Part 63. Odido
On Thursday, customers of telecom provider Odido received an ominous email:
‘You are receiving this email because we want to warn you as a precaution about possible risks as a result of a cyber attack at Odido.’
It goes without saying that Odido ‘greatly regrets this situation’ and is working with external cybersecurity experts to respond adequately.
In the email, Odido already warns that phishing is coming. So:
‘Be extra alert for suspicious activities. Unfortunately, cyber incidents such as these are becoming increasingly common and no organization is immune. Not every data breach leads to actual misuse, but we cannot rule out the possibility of misuse of your data.’
Odido also comes with some hints:
We previously wrote about the following phishing attempts:
- Corona-phishing
- Woningnet-phishing
- ING-phishing
- Rabo and SNS fake email
- KvK-phishing
- PostNL-phishing
- WeTransfer-phishing
- DigiD-phishing
- ICS/creditcard-phishing
- MijnOverheid (Energy Surcharge) phishing
- Mail account (limit exceeded)
- iCloud-phishing: ‘gratis’ 50 GB
- WeTransfer-phishing (II)
- Credit Card-phishing (II)
- T-Mobile phishing
- Netflix-phishing
- Trade register check? No, phishing!
- ERecognition warning? No: online fraud!
- In the crosshairs of Interpol? No: Scam!
- Bunq
- McAfee©-Phishing
- BOL.com
- Waterfall
- Tax authorities phishing
- SHARE (II)
- MyGovernment (QR-code)
- Cloud storage
- FedEx
- ICS-sms
- Bunq II
- Mail password
- BOL.com (II)
- Tax authorities (II)
- Ziggo
- Tax authorities (III)
- Netflix (II)
- ANWB
- Home insulation
- Googthe
- PostNL (II)
- Credit Card (III)
- National government: Emergency package
- KvK (II)
- DigiD (II)
- MyGovernment (III)
- MyGovernment (IV)
- SHARE (III)
- MyGovernment (V)
- WhatsApp / SMS (II)
- PostNL-sms (III)
- Rabo (IV) & Silver Cross
- SIM card
- YOU
- ABN AMRO
- Vewin
- Netherlands Enterprise Agency
- Cloud-phishing (III)
- Network management
- ABN AMRO
- Odido
How do you recognize phishing? The message contains a threat (account closed or suspended, a fine or assessment) or reward (price, discount, money back) and usually asks for a quick response (last warning, within 24 hours). Spelling and style are flawed. The sender (address) does not match the domain name of the so-called sender. The email (or text message) contains the request to check or update personal data. The links in the email (made visible by hovering the mouse over them) often refer to strange websites and domains (so do not click), a shortened link (bit.ly) is also suspicious.
By Di-Lan Sun. Info from mail Odido.

date:2026-02-13 22:22:00
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