Re:amaze can identify email messages that fail authentication checks and may have been sent using a spoofed sender address.
When an incoming email fails authentication, an Unverified sender alert appears below the message in the conversation view. This warning helps your team identify messages that may not have originated from the sender shown in the From address.
How it works
Email authentication helps verify that a message was sent from the domain it claims to be from. If Re:amaze detects that a message fails DMARC authentication, the sender cannot be verified and the message is flagged with an Unverified sender alert.
Hover your cursor over the alert to view the following message:
"This message failed email authentication (DMARC), so we couldn't verify it was really sent from
Reviewing unverified sender alerts
Most messages that fail email authentication checks are still delivered to your inbox and displayed with an unverified sender alert, since this does not automatically mean the message is malicious. However, some messages may be automatically routed to spam when they are identified as high-confidence fraudulent messages that appear to come from a trusted sender.
Before making account changes, resetting passwords, updating billing information, or sharing sensitive information, verify that the sender is who they claim to be. In some cases, legitimate messages may fail authentication checks due to email forwarding or mail server configuration issues. For this reason, an unverified sender alert should be treated as a warning rather than proof that a message is malicious.
Unverified sender alerts cannot be disabled.
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