A ransomware listing naming Dadolighting and claiming 17 extracted email addresses shows how even limited identifier exposure can expand phishing, impersonation, and extortion risk.
Business Email Compromise is best understood as coordinated fraud, built from compromised access, financial research, and cash-out networks rather than a simple inbox trick.
Business email compromise thrives on believable identity abuse, not noisy payloads, which is why behavioral detection is becoming central to email defense.
A webinar framed around phishing, business email compromise, and account takeover points to a deeper problem: defenders are not just filtering mail, they are triaging identity and fraud signals faster than humans can comfortably keep up.
Attackers are leaning on anonymous-looking lures to target senior staff, turning curiosity and urgency into the first step of intrusion.
A webinar on behavioral AI points to a bigger shift in defense: stopping phishing, BEC, and account takeover now depends on watching identity and behavior, not just message content.
AI-assisted impersonation is pushing companies to confront a hard truth: identity cues such as a face, voice, or name are no longer enough to authorize sensitive action.
Phishing is no longer just noisy spam - it is becoming more organized, and AI is making some lures more convincing, more localized, and less dependent on obvious spelling mistakes.
The lesson is less about one alert and more about a recurring weakness: many leaders get basic warnings, but not the practical judgment needed to resist social engineering under pressure.
A business-themed email chain using RAR archives and in-memory execution shows how infostealers can slip from inbox to Windows endpoint without needing obvious malware theatrics.
A malspam campaign tied to bulletproof hosting shows how simple archive attachments and resilient infrastructure can keep a JavaScript backdoor campaign alive across regions and sectors.
A months-long abuse of an internal Microsoft notification address shows how criminal campaigns can borrow legitimacy from routine email flows without proving a full breach.
A new email-security startup is betting that specialized AI agents can inspect every message fast enough to help blunt phishing, impersonation, and business email compromise.
A new security-awareness model puts neuroscience, adaptive AI, and edutainment on the front line of phishing and BEC defense, but the real test is whether behavior changes under pressure.
A published victim listing tied to Cmdorganization is a reminder that ransomware crews can weaponize reputation long before any breach is independently confirmed.
A confirmed breach at a global commercial real estate firm highlights how exposed account and contact data can fuel follow-on fraud, even when the full intrusion path remains unclear.
A reported extortion post naming a UK materials-and-logistics business shows how ransomware actors use volume, document lists, and public pressure to turn an unverified leak into an operational threat.
Business Email Compromise (BEC) attacks are on the rise-here’s how to spot and stop them before it’s too late.
Sophisticated attackers are turning trusted business routines into their most effective entry points.
Cybercriminals are quietly hijacking business emails by weaponizing overlooked mailbox rules-no malware required.