Phishing attacks often exploit trusted email domain names to deliver malicious payloads. Historically, the onus has been on recipients to identify and mitigate these threats. DMARC (Domain-based ...
The overwhelming majority of large healthcare organizations worldwide are still susceptible to spoofing of their own email domains, also known as impersonation attacks, which are a leading vector for ...
Federal agencies are off to an extremely promising start deploying an anti-spoofing email tool but they still have work to do. The Homeland Security Department issued a binding operational directive ...
Since its creation, email has suffered from an "original sin" - the inability to confirm a sender’s true identity. Recently, that flaw has led to an onslaught of phishing attacks - which often lead to ...
Research documents three fundamental gaps in DMARC that leave consumers unable to distinguish real corporate emails from sophisticated counterfeits - and presents blockchain anchoring as the missing ...
The number of domains using an anti-spoofing technology known as Domain-based Message Authentication, Reporting, and Conformance, or DMARC, topped 2.7 million in 2020, yet most domains still fail to ...
Email is one of the main and the only independent forms of modern communication, with the global email user base hitting 4.26 billion at the end of 2022. Given email’s prominence, it is naturally a ...
The majority of federal domains met a deadline to adopt an email authentication program aimed at preventing fake emails from being sent, according to an analysis by the cybersecurity firm Proofpoint.
Despite gradual improvements, many of the world’s largest companies remain exposed to domain-based cyber risks as attackers increasingly exploit weaknesses outside the traditional corporate firewall.