Financial services firms have genuinely embraced the digital age – just look at internet and mobile banking. So why are some banks still failing to address the email authenticity and deliverability issue that still plagues them across the entire web?…Continue Reading: How DMARC can help banks win back trust
Protecting Charities with DMARC
A simple way for charities to protect themselves from exact domain impersonation and fraud is by implementing a strong DMARC policy. DMARC is an email security protocol that when implemented at p=reject protects your domain from being impersonated by cybercriminals and used in some of the most advanced phishing attacks. …Continue Reading: Protecting Charities with DMARC
Red Sift wins at the Cyber Security Awards 2017
We’re delighted to announce that Red Sift won the Cyber Security Start-Up of the Year category at the Cyber Security Awards 2017…Continue Reading: Red Sift wins at the Cyber Security Awards 2017
Without DMARC, email is the Achilles Heel of cybersecurity
Lack of protection from exact impersonation is a hole in the way the global email infrastructure works, exposing every business to cybercriminals. DMARC is the security protocol that secures your email, protects your clients, and improves the deliverability of every email you send…Continue Reading: Without DMARC, email is the Achilles Heel of cybersecurity
5 reasons why marketers need DMARC
Whereas DMARC is a vital measure for email security, it’s important businesses realize the marketing benefits of the email authentication protocol too. It can increase your deliverability, open rates, improve your inbox placement, and benefit the ROI on your email marketing overall…Continue Reading: 5 reasons why marketers need DMARC
Making sense of email security and DMARC
Why is everyone making such a fuss about DMARC and its importance for email security? In short, because it’s easy for cybercriminals to send emails pretending to be you, and DMARC is the only protocol that can stop this. …Continue Reading: Making sense of email security and DMARC