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Grease the Skids: Improve Training Successes by Optimizing the Environment

  You have carefully selected a training program. Employees are completing the courses. And yet, they are not reporting suspicious emails and their passwords are made up of favorite sports teams and graduation dates. What is missing? Research shows that implementing training alone, as good as it may be, is not enough. We have learned that the transfer of new knowledge and...
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Training Not Sinking In? Try a Programmatic Approach

  In honor of National Cybersecurity Awareness Month (CSAM), Dane Boyd, PhishLabs' Security Training Manager, and I will share a series of posts covering topics from cybersecurity to organizational learning and development. We are kicking off the series by covering a topic near and dear to my heart: taking a programmatic approach to implementing a security training program. A...
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Phishing Simulations: Should they Reflect Real-World Attacks?

  As the manager of a security awareness team, whose primary goal is to educate users on how to spot phishing attacks, I often get asked, “can you make the phishing simulations look like real-world phish?" This is when I show people what real-world phishing attacks look like.   Because our SOC analyzes millions of phishing emails each year, we have a great data set to...
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Low Appetite for Long Security Training? Use a Bite Sized Approach

  Although computer-based training has been on the scene for over two decades, it is only recently that learning professionals have begun to optimize it. Often these courses present hours of content in a single learning experience. While the flexibility of computer-based training offers convenience, learners are often overloaded and overwhelmed by the amount of information...
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Phishing Number One Cause of Data Breaches: Lessons from Verizon DBIR

  In the cyber security world, few research reports are more widely respected than Verizon's annual Data Breach Investigations Report (DBIR). The DBIR—which is based on data from publicly disclosed security incidents, Verizon's Threat Research Advisory Center, and dozens of industry contributors—is one of the most detailed and comprehensive reports available to the security...
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More Than Half of Phishing Sites Now Use HTTPS

  As more of the web further embrace HTTPS and SSL certs, it's becoming a requirement that threat actors use it, too. By the end of Q1 2019, more than half of all phishing sites have employed the use of HTTPS, now up to 58%. This is a major milestone and shows that threat actors actions often mirror that of the majority of users. “In Q1 2019, 58 percent of phishing sites...
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6/13 Webinar: Handling Threats That Land in User Inboxes

  The risk of a user receiving a phishing attack is higher than ever, and technological solutions often miss the most devastating of them. Though technology is both an important and required component in protecting the enterprise, security teams need to remain vigilant and educated on quickly identifying threats which make it past technology. This includes the latest social...
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These Are the Top Most Targeted Countries by Phishing Attacks

  The United States is once again, and for the foreseeable future, the most targeted country by threat actors' phishing attacks. Making up an astonishing 84% of all phishing volume, the U.S. saw a single percent decline from 85% last year. But... While this sounds like a positive, the number of attacks went up by more than 60,000 in 2018. By comparison, the number of attacks...
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The Most Common Types of Reported Emails

  There are all sorts of things that end up in your inbox, but among those that are reported to a SOC or security team, malicious content only makes up a small percent. Among the analysis provided in this year's annual Phishing Trends and Intelligence (PTI) report, we added a new section based on data from our Phishing Incident Response team. The data analysis resulted in a...
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Hiding in Plain Sight: How Phishing Attacks are Evolving

  Phishing attacks are supposed to be visible. If you can't see them, how could anyone possibly fall for them? Since the dawning of time for phishing attacks there has been a constant struggle between the threat actors creating phishing sites and the individuals and organizations combating them. This has caused phishing attacks to evolve in to more complicated and stealthy...
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How to Cut Healthcare Cyber Incidents by 80 Percent

Healthcare data breaches are among the most costly of any industry, and phishing attacks are the number one cause.  Security technologies, while essential, are not enough to mitigate the threat posed by phishing. Over 90 percent of data breaches contain a phishing component, and the average cost to remediate a data breach is $3.86 million. However, the silver lining is that...
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Less Than 3 Percent of ‘Collection #1' Data Dump Passwords are Unique

This month the largest recorded data dump in history, 87GB filled with passwords and user credentials, was made available. Dubbed Collection #1 consists of 1,160,253,228 unique combinations of email addresses and passwords. Though historic, there are two positive notes regarding this information: The first is that this data set was circulated on hacking forums back in December...
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Users Failing Phishing Simulations? That's ok

  Phishing simulations come with a range of emotions for the users who interact with them. Some will simply ignore them, others may fail by clicking on a link or attachment, and for the well-trained, they may even report them. Even if there is a negative outcome, training leads and organizations should not be worried, yet. Just like in school, these simulations are just that,...
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The Light in the Dark: Myths and Truths about the Dark Web

  There are many misconceptions about the dark web and what goes on in the digital underground. Though the dark web is usually associated with criminal activities including drug dealing, human trafficking, selling counterfeit consumer goods and many other malicious acts, not everything in the dark web is completely dark. Many questions are frequently asked about the dark web...
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Phishing 101: Targeted Phishing Attacks

    The most likely way that you will be compromised online is through a simple phish or a socially engineered attack. Today, these two techniques are often combined to create an even more threatening attack, an intelligently targeted phish. Thanks to the wealth of information that we all leave behind us as we use the Internet, it is easier than ever for a social engineer to...
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How To Change Security Behaviors: Information Security

  Let's be honest, employees make mistakes. And sometimes those mistakes have catastrophic consequences. Everybody has heard stories about people accidentally leaving an unencrypted work laptop on the train, or on the seat of their car. Heck, on a busy day we could even imagine ourselves doing it. But with industry regulators finally starting to find their teeth — and the...
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6 Steps to Quickly Defang Reported Phishing Emails

  So here it is… the first one you've received. Everything has been building up to this. You spent days preparing the business case, weeks designing the training program… and it's finally paid off. The first user-reported phishing email has hit your inbox. Now… what should you do with it? Time is of the Essence Reported phishing emails are good for a lot of reasons. For...
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How To Make Reporting a Phish So Easy Even Your Busiest Execs Will Do It

  Frustrating, isn't it?  You design a powerful anti-phishing program, secure funding from your executive board, provide world-class training. You do everything right… Oh, your users are probably spotting phishing emails. After all, they've engaged with the training, and seem to be taking it seriously. But no matter how many times you remind them, they just won't report...
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The 11 Types of Reported Emails

  You receive an email, you are unfamiliar with the sender's name or email address, and they are offering you a new service or deal on something. Is it malicious? Not necessarily. Perhaps you forgot about signing up for a newsletter a while back. Malicious Versus Benign According to Symantec, 55.5 percent of business emails are considered spam emails, with the average...
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A Quarter of Phishing Attacks are Now Hosted on HTTPS Domains: Why?

  The push for more widespread adoption of HTTPS has been in full-force this year as a way to increase the number of websites that securely transmit information on the Internet. In January, both Chrome and Firefox browsers began alerting users whenever sensitive information, such as passwords or credit card information, was entered on a non-HTTPS web page. In October, Google...