Preventing sophisticated phishing attacks aimed at employees
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As technology advances, phishing attempts are becoming more sophisticated. It can be challenging for employees to recognize an email is malicious when it looks normal, so it’s up to their company to properly train workers in prevention and detection.
Misspellings and poorly formatted text used to be the leading indicators of an email scam, but they’re getting more sophisticated. Today, hackers can spoof email addresses and bots sound like humans. It’s becoming challenging for employees to tell if their emails are real or fake, which puts the company at risk of data breaches.
In March 2023, an artificial intelligence chatbot called GPT-4 received an update that lets users give specific instructions about styles and tasks. Attackers can use it to pose as employees and send convincing messages since it sounds intelligent and has general knowledge of any industry.
Since classic warning signs of phishing attacks aren’t applicable anymore, companies should train all employees on the new, sophisticated methods. As phishing attacks change, so should businesses.
Your company can take preventive action to secure its employees against attacks. You need to make it difficult for hackers to reach them, and your company must train them on warning signs. While blocking spam senders and reinforcing security systems is up to you, they must know how to identify and report themselves.
You can prevent data breaches if employees know what to watch out for:
It may be harder for people to detect warning signs as attacks evolve, but you can prepare them for those situations as well as possible. It’s unlikely hackers have access to their specific duties or the inner workings of your company, so you must capitalize on those details.
Sophisticated attacks will sound intelligent and possibly align with their general duties, so everyone must constantly be aware. Training will help employees identify signs, but you need to take more preventive action to ensure you’re covered.
Basic security measures — like regularly updating passwords and running antivirus software — are fundamental to protecting your company. For example, everyone should change their passwords once every three months at minimum to ensure hackers have limited access even if their phishing attempt is successful.
Training ensures employees are prepared since they’re often highly susceptible to attacks. The cybersecurity team can create phishing simulations to mimic actual threats. For example, they send emails with fake links and track how many people click them. If anyone does, you can retrain them on proper behavior to ensure it doesn’t happen again. With attacks becoming more intelligent, preparing the company for everything is essential.
You can remain protected even when phishing attacks are successful as long as you have the proper security measures in place. For example, out of the 1,800 emails one company received during an attack, 14 employees clicked the link because they didn’t notice the warning signs. Even though the malware was set to install, almost every device remained unaffected because they were updated and secured. The company detected malicious software on the one that wasn’t secured and fixed the issue within hours.
Training can’t prevent every employee from clicking on malicious links or attachments, so you must have a proper response. You can still prevent attacks at this stage if you and your company’s employees know what comes next.
Updated security software and procedures will protect against sophisticated phishing attacks:
Sophisticated phishing attacks aren’t avoidable, but you can minimize their effects if you manage your response. It’s likely they won’t recognize the email is malicious if they click the link thinking it’s legitimate, so you must train them on the appropriate identification and detection.
Training and simulated phishing attempts will help protect your company. Updated passwords and security systems will also make your systems more secure. You can prevent sophisticated attacks targeting employees if employees know how to recognize warning signs and the proper procedures.
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