Email Eavesdropping Alerts

RMail Advanced Analytical AI Unveils the Shadows of Cybercrime Within Your Networks, Documents, and Inboxes

November 17, 2023 / in Blog / by Zafar Khan, RPost CEO

Cybercriminals are using AI to be smarter in defeating you. You need to use AI to be smarter in detecting them.

If you’ve used the internet for anything, you’ve probably been faced with CAPTCHA, otherwise known as the Completely Automated Public Turing test to tell Computers and Humans Apart.

Unveiling the Secrets of Email Journey with RMail AI: Tracking Views, Popularity, and Cybersecurity Threats

November 10, 2023 / in Blog / by Zafar Khan, RPost CEO

We take for granted that some of the privacy tools we use are really just thin, easily-undone, layers of software.

The pandemic lockdown that forced us all to work-from-home was a true shock to the system for most people who hadn’t worked a full day via videoconferencing.

With Email Eavesdropping Alerts, You Will Know When You or Your Clients are Being Drawn into Email Schemes

June 30, 2023 / in Blog / by Zafar Khan, RPost CEO

A blissful way to counter payment paranoia.

Now there’s another common syndrome in the working world that I’d like to shed a light on: “Payment Paranoia”.

RPost Services are Better Together with Microsoft

May 12, 2023 / in Blog / by Zafar Khan, RPost CEO

Mother’s Day is all about getting the family together and celebrating the one person in the family that is often the glue holding things (typical family chaos) together. Better celebrated together; if at all possible. Better together.

RMail’s PRE-Crime Active Threat Hunting Services Will Stave Off the Inevitable Increase in Cyberthreats to Your Organization

March 17, 2023 / in Blog / by Zafar Khan, RPost CEO

A quick program note for our regular readers: we’re interrupting our scheduled series on the best-in-class, scalable eSignature software that is RSign so that we can address some important current economic events…

Email Eavesdropping Detection Service Can See Where in the World One’s Email is Being Routed

February 24, 2023 / in Blog / by Zafar Khan, RPost CEO

Guess which of these conspiracy theories is actually true. This article is the fourth and final of a series devoted to Email Eavesdropping™ threat hunting.

RMail’s Aggregate Eavesdropping Heartbeat Monitor Offers a Daily Snapshot of Email Eavesdropping Risks for MSPs or IT Admins

February 17, 2023 / in Blog / by Zafar Khan, RPost CEO

RMail’s heartbeat monitor is like having your own email secret service patrolling your inbox. Previously on Tech Essentials, we let you live through, in chilling detail, a sophisticated email scam that originated with an email exchange that was eavesdropped on by a cybercriminal gang. In retrospect, the most sophisticated aspect of the scam was the […]

Sophisticated Email Initiated Crime & How to Prevent Them With RMail PRE-Crime Services

February 10, 2023 / in Blog / by Zafar Khan, RPost CEO

You may wish you were one of the zombies from The Last of Us after a BEC attack. Previously on Tech Essentials, we introduced you to the cybercrime phenomenon initiated by Email Eavesdropping and ending in a mis-wire, in part 1 of a 3-part series we’re running.

80% of Organizations have Experienced Cybercriminal BEC Attacks Over the Last Year and they Start with Email Eavesdropping Activities

February 03, 2023 / in Blog / by Zafar Khan, RPost CEO

You may be barricaded inside the best of (fire)walls, but you could still be exposed by your recipients’ nostalgia for their memorable passwords. Joseph Heller, author of Catch 22, famously wrote that “just because you’re paranoid doesn’t mean they aren’t after you.” Many Generation Xers out there may recall that Kurt Cobain also used this […]

How to Protect Your Email Account Passwords from Hackers

January 20, 2023 / in Blog / by Zafar Khan, RPost CEO

Many people, nostalgic for their 90s-era email account passwords, are having (or already had) their emails hacked. I don’t mean to date myself (a lonely pursuit anyway), but I can remember having passwords in the 90s that were quaint by modern standards—in addition to being woefully inadequate to protect against today’s cybersleuths.