Alert on External Email When There Is an Actual Issue Only RMail offers features that can foil BEC attacks without “cry wolf” email stamps. We’ve talked a lot about the hydra of BEC (business email compromise) attacks recently due to the increasing share of these types of attacks within the universe of cybercrime that employ multiple techniques to lure users into sending money to the wrong person (to the cybercriminal). Recall that the hydra possesses many heads, and for every head chopped off, it would regrow two new heads. If your email system is not up to snuff, then fixing only one of these BEC attack vectors can easily lead to increased and potentially more devastating attacks. [Join next week’s Optimize!22 product showcases on BEC email security, document rights management, and e-signatures – read more here] Now we have another, less mythical animal to introduce: the wolf. Recall the old fable where the shepherd boy, in an apparently sad bid for attention, kept crying out “wolf!” to the villagers when there was no wolf anywhere near the herd. One of the villagers famously said to the boy, “save your frightened song for when there is really something wrong!” When the boy finally did see the wolf, well, you know the rest of the story. (More recently, there has developed a school of thought that places blame on the villagers in the fable for leaving such a self-absorbed attention seeker in charge of the herd. In other words, if we left one of the Real Housewives in charge of NORAD, wouldn’t it be our fault if we found ourselves looking up from a pile of radioactive ash?) Many email gateways have alerting capabilities for reply hijacking and anti-whaling. This is good. However, they will place stamps on emails regardless of whether there is a mismatch in the email domain—a clear sign of an incoming BEC attack. To illustrate this more clearly, can you easily tell the difference between these three stamps (i.e., can you spot the real wolf?)
If yes, congrats, but are you prepared to put in the work every time you respond to one of the hundred or so emails you send a day? These methods distract users and cause them to burn