Proofpoint
Overview:
Today’s attackers are taking advantage of changing business dynamics to target people everywhere they work. Staying current on the latest attack vectors and threats is an essential part of securing the enterprise against breaches and compromised data.

Ransomware
Ransomware is a type of malicious software that blocks access to a computer system or data, usually by encrypting it, until the victim pays a fee to the attacker. In many cases, the ransom demand comes with a deadline—if the victim doesn’t pay in time, the data is gone forever.

Business Email Compromise (BEC)
Impostor emails trick people into sending money—sometimes hundreds of thousands of dollars in a single wire transfer—or sensitive corporate or personal data. They appear to come from the CEO or other high-level executive and urge the recipient to keep the details confidential.

Information Seeking Scams
Scammers want information, and they try to extract it by tricking recipients of emails. The information they collect could be an organization chart – or as significant as usernames and passwords to corporate resources.

Spam
Spam, also known as Unsolicited Commercial Email (UCE), is often questionable, mass-emailed advertisements. At its peak, spam accounted for 92% of all email traffic, and most of the spam was non-malicious.

Malicious Email Attachments
Attackers attach files to email that indirectly launch an executable program that can destroy data, steal and upload information to outsiders, or can silently use the infiltrated computer for other tasks – all without the user’s knowledge.

Phishing
Phishing is a socially engineered attack that uses embedded URL links to extract information from the user or take control of their computer. Clicking on a link opens a browser, and the user is taken to a site that’s been setup as a trap by the attackers.

Longlining
Mass customized phishing messages that are typically engineered to look like they are only arriving in small quantities, mimicking targeted attacks. Attackers leverage approaches used by mass marketing campaigners to generate millions of dissimilar messages.

Watering Hole
A targeted attack designed to compromise users within a specific industry or function by infecting websites they typically visit and luring them to a malicious site. Watering Hole attacks, or strategic website compromise attacks, are limited in scope as they rely on an element of luck.

Spear Phishing
Socially-engineered and sophisticated threats sent to an organization’s users that are typically designed to steal information. Spear phishing is a phishing attack where attackers typically personalize messages to the user based on publicly available information about them.

Advanced Persistent Threat
Mostly nation-state-sponsored attacks aimed at compromising an organization to carry out espionage or sabotage goals, but which aim to remain undetected for a longer period of time. The term Advanced Persistent Threat (APT) is often misused.

Endpoint-Delivered Threats
Attackers can use strategies such as leaving an infected USB drive around the organization’s parking lot in anticipation that an employee will pick it up and plug it into a network connected system.

Network-Delivered Threats
To execute a successful network attack, attackers must typically actively hack a company’s infrastructure to exploit software vulnerabilities that allow them to remotely execute commands on internal operating systems.

Graymail
Graymail is bulk email that does not fit the definition of spam because it is solicited and has varying value to different recipients.

Email Gateway
A Secure Email Gateway (SEG) is a device or software that is used to monitor emails that are being sent and received. A SEG is designed to prevent unwanted email and deliver good email.

Email Security
Email security describes various techniques for keeping sensitive information in email communication and accounts secure against unauthorized access, loss, or compromise.

Email Filtering
Email Filtering is the process of filtering the inbound and outbound email traffic of an organization. For some industries, an on-premises email filtering deployment is required to comply with certain regulations.

Encryption
In cryptography, encryption is the process of encoding a message or information in such a way that only authorized parties can access it and those who are not authorized cannot.

Data Loss Prevention (DLP)
Data loss prevention (DLP) is a strategy for making sure that end users do not send sensitive or critical information outside the corporate network. The term is also used to describe software products that help a network administrator control what data end users can transfer.

DMARC
DMARC is an open email authentication protocol that enables domain-level protection of the email channel. DMARC authentication is designed to detect and prevent email spoofing techniques often used in phishing, business email compromise (BEC), and other email-based attacks.