Blog de Zscaler

Reciba en su bandeja de entrada las últimas actualizaciones del blog de Zscaler

CXO Insights

Woogle: The fake merger that proves we need zero trust

image
BRIAN DEITCH
abril 25, 2025 - 2 Min de lectura

A few weeks ago, Google dropped a bombshell: a $32 billion move to acquire Wiz.

That’s billion with a “B”—the kind of money where you could buy a 2025 Ford Raptor R in every color, then still have enough left over to buy Reddit and give it a long-overdue personality transplant.

As I was recording my PEBCAK podcast, I had a thought: what if, instead of acquiring Wiz, Google just merged with them in a glorious branding mashup? I started tossing around names like Wizgle, G-Wiz, and my personal favorite—Woogle.

Then, like any reasonable adult with an internet connection and a sense of mischief, I thought to myself: What would happen if I posted a fake announcement on LinkedIn saying Google and Wiz had merged?

So I did.

Using the dark arts of ChatGPT and a suspiciously professional-looking fake logo, I fired off a spoof announcement at 5:00 a.m. on a Monday: you know, peak “executive reads LinkedIn on the toilet” hours.
 

Image

 

And then I watched.

The Experiment

I embedded a harmless (but external) link just to see what kind of traction it would get. It wasn’t phishing. It wasn’t malware. It wasn’t even a rickroll. Just a decoy. A social engineering honeypot.

Within three days, the link was clicked 1,813 times. By week four, over 2,500.
 

Image

 

Imagine for a second that this wasn’t some playful hoax. Imagine that link had been laced with malware, cross-site scripting, or an actual credential harvester.

This wasn’t a test environment. This was LinkedIn, a platform that professionals trust implicitly. But here’s the problem: trust is not a control.

Lessons from Woogle

  • Even the best of us click dumb links. Titles like “BREAKING: Google merges with Wiz in $32B ‘Woogle’ Deal” are catnip.
  • User training is still your first and last line of defense. You can’t patch human curiosity, but you can make people pause before clicking.
  • TLS inspection is non-negotiable. Just because something is encrypted doesn’t mean it’s safe—it might just be a very secure Trojan horse.
  • Zero Trust isn’t a vibe—it’s the equation for not getting owned. One user. One click. That’s all it takes. 1800+ fell for it, and this wasn’t even real. Trust nothing, inspect everything.

So what started as a joke turned into a proof point: if your security strategy hinges on "nobody here would fall for that," then congratulations—you’re already compromised. The Woogle isn’t just a mythical merger. It’s a mirror.
 

form submtited
Gracias por leer

¿Este post ha sido útil?

Exención de responsabilidad: Este blog post ha sido creado por Zscaler con fines informativos exclusivamente y se ofrece "como es" sin ninguna garantía de precisión, integridad o fiabilidad. Zscaler no asume ninguna responsabilidad por errores u omisiones ni por las acciones que se tomen basándose en la información proporcionada. Cualquier sitio web o recurso de terceros enlazado en esta publicación de blog se proporciona únicamente por conveniencia, y Zscaler no se hace responsable de su contenido ni de sus prácticas. Todo el contenido está sujeto a cambios sin previo aviso. Al acceder a este blog, acepta estos términos y reconoce ser el único responsable de verificar y utilizar la información de manera adecuada según sus necesidades.

Reciba en su bandeja de entrada las últimas actualizaciones del blog de Zscaler

Al enviar el formulario, acepta nuestra política de privacidad.