The whole Microsoft 365 system seems to be quite vulnerable to phishing. Sometimes SSO works, sometimes you need a password, maybe 2FA, maybe not. Many microsoft notification emails come from external sources (with a big banner “this email comes from an external sender, be cautious”).
This makes it hard for our brains to spot the small differences that make a phishing campaign successful.
The solution is to suspect every external message and send them all to the phishing mailbox. Tell your boss that you are following the phishing training that you did first.
They will have to get their shit together and send important messages from internal mail addresses. That’s just laziness.
The whole Microsoft 365 system seems to be quite vulnerable to phishing. Sometimes SSO works, sometimes you need a password, maybe 2FA, maybe not. Many microsoft notification emails come from external sources (with a big banner “this email comes from an external sender, be cautious”).
This makes it hard for our brains to spot the small differences that make a phishing campaign successful.
The solution is to suspect every external message and send them all to the phishing mailbox. Tell your boss that you are following the phishing training that you did first.
They will have to get their shit together and send important messages from internal mail addresses. That’s just laziness.