Meanwhile microsoft’s exchange online can’t even prevent attackers from spoofing microsoft.com as the sender. I nearly got caught by a fake quarantine notification once. The thing that made me suspicious was that the fake login page only took a second to load. The real one is never that fast.
The entire quarantine BS is trying to reinvent the wheel of the spam folder and causes a shitload of headaches for our internal IT.
Yes, I even ran every character through unicode search to make sure that none of them are different characters than what I thought. All of them were ASCII.
Meanwhile microsoft’s exchange online can’t even prevent attackers from spoofing microsoft.com as the sender. I nearly got caught by a fake quarantine notification once. The thing that made me suspicious was that the fake login page only took a second to load. The real one is never that fast.
The entire quarantine BS is trying to reinvent the wheel of the spam folder and causes a shitload of headaches for our internal IT.
Are you 100% certain that the sender domain was microsoft.com ? I have almost been had by something like rnicrosoft.com
Yes, I even ran every character through unicode search to make sure that none of them are different characters than what I thought. All of them were ASCII.