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A new phishing email is posing as Google to steal users' account credentials, and it's been authenticated by Google itself.
A new phishing email attack has surfaced, and these messages are somehow authenticated by Google. But how is that possible?
Google says it's rolling out a fix for a bug that allowed scammers to send a convincing-looking email to developer Nick Johnson about a subpoena request.
While classic scam signs such as poor spelling and grammar are useful to look out for, scammers are always evolving their tactics. Scam texts can be reported by forwarding them to 7726 and scam emails ...
Scammers are targeting email inboxes in a sophisticated phishing scheme that impersonates multiple businesses. These emails appear authentic, with logos, graphics, and footers designed to mimic email ...
A large-scale phishing campaign dubbed 'PoisonSeed' compromises corporate email marketing accounts to distribute emails ...
Morphing Meerkat phishing kit can spoof more than 100 different brands It's been used to send "thousands" of emails, experts warn Defenses includes adding a strong layer of DNS security ...
data breach notification site has fallen victim to a phishing attack that exposed the email addresses of subscribers ... factors that meant he missed warning signs such as his password manager ...
Once the victim reaches the final destination, the phishing kit loads and queries the victim’s email domain’s MX record using DoH via Google or Cloudflare. Based on the result, the kit loads a ...