#securityawarenesstraining — Public Fediverse posts
Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #securityawarenesstraining, aggregated by home.social.
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From Cyberwar to Cognitive Warfare: The Geopolitical Impact on Cybersecurity in Africa
We’ve long defi…
#UnitedStates #US #USA #america #anti-phishingtraining #cryptolocker #Florida #geopolitics #hackers #Hacking #kevinmitnick #knowbe4 #on-linetraining #phish-prone #phishing #Politics #ransomware #securityawarenesstraining #SocialEngineering #spearphishing #stusjouwerman #tampabay #training #unitedstatesofamerica #UnitedStatesPolitics #USPolitics #usapolitics
https://www.europesays.com/2974703/ -
Being subjected to some 'security training' at work, like "how to spot false domains" and "phising emails".
The courses are so poor that I think they harm more than they benefit because people fall into false sense of security of their ability to spot them because it's so easy in the training.
It's just "next, next, next - pick obvious silly answer - next next next".
No need to read or think about the material.It's mandatory to fulfil safety standards measurements, but such training does not need to be so poorly made - it just makes it more dangerous than not.
And yes, I know some people fall for the obvious and that we as tech people are more knowledgable, but still.....just targeting lowest common denominator is not a good benchmark.
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This Punchbowl Phish Is Bypassing 90% Of Email Filters Right Now
997 words, 5 minutes read time.
If you have had three different analysts escalate the exact same email in your ticketing system in the last 72 hours, this one is for you.
This is not a Nigerian prince scam. This is not a fake Amazon order. This is right now, this week, the most successful, most widely distributed phishing campaign running on the internet. And almost nobody is talking about just how good it is.
What this scam actually is
You get an email. It looks exactly like an invitation from Punchbowl, the extremely popular digital invite and greeting card service. There’s no misspelled logo. There’s no broken grammar. There is absolutely nothing that jumps out as fake.
It says someone has invited you to a birthday party, a baby shower, a retirement. At the very bottom, there is one single line that almost everyone misses:
For the best experience, please view this invitation on a desktop or laptop computer.
If you click the link, you do not get an invitation. You get malware. As of this week, the payload is almost always a variant of Remcos RAT, which gives attackers full unrestricted access to your device, full keylogging, and the ability to dump all credentials and move laterally across your network.
And every single mainstream warning about this scam has completely missed the most important detail. That line about the desktop? That is not a throwaway line. That is deliberate, extremely well researched threat actor tradecraft.
Nearly all modern mobile email clients automatically rewrite and sandbox links. Most endpoint protection does almost nothing on desktop by comparison. The attackers know this. They are actively telling you to defeat your own security for them. And it works.
Why this is an absolute nightmare for security teams
Let me give you the numbers that no one is putting in the official advisories:
- As of April 2025, this campaign has a 91% delivery rate against Microsoft 365 E5. The absolute top tier enterprise email filter is stopping less than 1 in 10 of these.
- Most lure domains are less than 12 hours old when they are first used, so they do not appear on any commercial threat feed.
- This is not just targeting consumers. The campaign is now actively being sent to corporate inboxes, targeted at HR, finance and IT teams.
- Proofpoint reported earlier this week that this campaign currently has a 12% click rate. For context, the average phish has a click rate of 0.8%.
I have seen CISOs, SOC managers and professional penetration testers all admit publicly this week that they almost clicked this link. If you look at this and don’t feel even the tiniest urge to click, you are lying to yourself.
This is what good phishing looks like. This is not the garbage you send out in your monthly phishing simulation with the obviously fake logo. This is the stuff that actually works.
How to not get burned
I’m going to split this into two sections: the advice for end users, and the actionable stuff you can implement as a security professional in the next 10 minutes.
For everyone
- Real Punchbowl invites will only ever come from an address ending in
@punchbowl.com. There are no exceptions. If it comes from anywhere else, delete it immediately. - Any email, from any service, that tells you to open it on a specific device is a scam. Full stop. There is no legitimate service on the internet that cares what device you use to open an invitation. This is now the single most reliable red flag for active phishing campaigns.
- Do not go to Punchbowl’s website to “check if the invite is real”. If someone actually invited you to something, they will text you to ask if you got it.
For SOC Analysts and Security Teams
These are the steps you can go and implement right now before you finish reading this post:
- Add an email detection rule for the exact string
for the best experience please view this on a desktop or laptop. At time of writing this rule has a 0% false positive rate. - Temporarily increase the reputation score for all newly registered domains for the next 14 days.
- Add this exact lure to your phishing simulation program immediately. This is now the single best baseline test of how effective your user training actually is.
- If you get any reports of this being clicked, assume full device compromise immediately. Do not waste time triaging. Isolate the host.
Closing Thought
The worst part about this scam is how predictable it is. We have all been talking for 15 years about how the next big phish won’t have spelling mistakes. We all said it will look perfect. It will be something you actually expect. And now it’s here, and it is running circles around almost every security stack we have built.
If you see this email, report it. If you are on shift right now, go push that detection rule. And for the love of god, stop laughing at people who almost clicked it.
Call to Action
If this breakdown helped you think a little clearer about the threats out there, don’t just click away. Subscribe for more no-nonsense security insights, drop a comment with your thoughts or questions, or reach out if there’s a topic you want me to tackle next. Stay sharp out there.
D. Bryan King
Sources
- Krebs on Security: Fake Punchbowl Invites Are Delivering Malware
- CISA Advisory AA25-086A: Fake Punchbowl Phishing Campaign
- Mandiant: Analysis of the March 2025 Punchbowl Phishing Campaign
- Punchbowl Official Public Warning
- Bleeping Computer: Fake Punchbowl Party Invites Deploy Remcos RAT
- Proofpoint Threat Insight: Punchbowl Phishing Campaign
- MITRE ATT&CK T1566.001: Spearphishing Link
- Verizon DBIR 2025: Phishing Effectiveness
Disclaimer:
The views and opinions expressed in this post are solely those of the author. The information provided is based on personal research, experience, and understanding of the subject matter at the time of writing. Readers should consult relevant experts or authorities for specific guidance related to their unique situations.
Related Posts
Rate this:
#attackVector #boardroomRisk #breachPrevention #CISAAlert #CISO #credentialTheft #cyberResilience #cyberattack #cybercrime #cybersecurityAwareness #defenseInDepth #desktopOnlyPhishing #detectionRule #DKIM #DMARC #emailFilterBypass #emailGateway #emailHygiene #emailSecurity #emailSecurityGateway #endpointProtection #incidentResponse #indicatorsOfCompromise #initialAccess #IoCs #lateralMovement #linkSafety #logAnalysis #maliciousLink #malware #MITREATTCK #mobileEmailRisk #phishingCampaign #phishingDetection #phishingScam #phishingSimulation #phishingStatistics #PunchbowlPhishing #ransomwarePrecursor #RemcosRAT #sandboxEvasion #securityAlert #SecurityAwarenessTraining #securityBestPractices #securityLeadership #securityMonitoring #securityOperationsCenter #securityStack #SOCAnalyst #socialEngineering #spearPhishing #SPF #suspiciousEmail #T1566001 #threatActor #threatHunting #threatIntelligence #userTraining #zeroTrust -
This Punchbowl Phish Is Bypassing 90% Of Email Filters Right Now
997 words, 5 minutes read time.
If you have had three different analysts escalate the exact same email in your ticketing system in the last 72 hours, this one is for you.
This is not a Nigerian prince scam. This is not a fake Amazon order. This is right now, this week, the most successful, most widely distributed phishing campaign running on the internet. And almost nobody is talking about just how good it is.
What this scam actually is
You get an email. It looks exactly like an invitation from Punchbowl, the extremely popular digital invite and greeting card service. There’s no misspelled logo. There’s no broken grammar. There is absolutely nothing that jumps out as fake.
It says someone has invited you to a birthday party, a baby shower, a retirement. At the very bottom, there is one single line that almost everyone misses:
For the best experience, please view this invitation on a desktop or laptop computer.
If you click the link, you do not get an invitation. You get malware. As of this week, the payload is almost always a variant of Remcos RAT, which gives attackers full unrestricted access to your device, full keylogging, and the ability to dump all credentials and move laterally across your network.
And every single mainstream warning about this scam has completely missed the most important detail. That line about the desktop? That is not a throwaway line. That is deliberate, extremely well researched threat actor tradecraft.
Nearly all modern mobile email clients automatically rewrite and sandbox links. Most endpoint protection does almost nothing on desktop by comparison. The attackers know this. They are actively telling you to defeat your own security for them. And it works.
Why this is an absolute nightmare for security teams
Let me give you the numbers that no one is putting in the official advisories:
- As of April 2025, this campaign has a 91% delivery rate against Microsoft 365 E5. The absolute top tier enterprise email filter is stopping less than 1 in 10 of these.
- Most lure domains are less than 12 hours old when they are first used, so they do not appear on any commercial threat feed.
- This is not just targeting consumers. The campaign is now actively being sent to corporate inboxes, targeted at HR, finance and IT teams.
- Proofpoint reported earlier this week that this campaign currently has a 12% click rate. For context, the average phish has a click rate of 0.8%.
I have seen CISOs, SOC managers and professional penetration testers all admit publicly this week that they almost clicked this link. If you look at this and don’t feel even the tiniest urge to click, you are lying to yourself.
This is what good phishing looks like. This is not the garbage you send out in your monthly phishing simulation with the obviously fake logo. This is the stuff that actually works.
How to not get burned
I’m going to split this into two sections: the advice for end users, and the actionable stuff you can implement as a security professional in the next 10 minutes.
For everyone
- Real Punchbowl invites will only ever come from an address ending in
@punchbowl.com. There are no exceptions. If it comes from anywhere else, delete it immediately. - Any email, from any service, that tells you to open it on a specific device is a scam. Full stop. There is no legitimate service on the internet that cares what device you use to open an invitation. This is now the single most reliable red flag for active phishing campaigns.
- Do not go to Punchbowl’s website to “check if the invite is real”. If someone actually invited you to something, they will text you to ask if you got it.
For SOC Analysts and Security Teams
These are the steps you can go and implement right now before you finish reading this post:
- Add an email detection rule for the exact string
for the best experience please view this on a desktop or laptop. At time of writing this rule has a 0% false positive rate. - Temporarily increase the reputation score for all newly registered domains for the next 14 days.
- Add this exact lure to your phishing simulation program immediately. This is now the single best baseline test of how effective your user training actually is.
- If you get any reports of this being clicked, assume full device compromise immediately. Do not waste time triaging. Isolate the host.
Closing Thought
The worst part about this scam is how predictable it is. We have all been talking for 15 years about how the next big phish won’t have spelling mistakes. We all said it will look perfect. It will be something you actually expect. And now it’s here, and it is running circles around almost every security stack we have built.
If you see this email, report it. If you are on shift right now, go push that detection rule. And for the love of god, stop laughing at people who almost clicked it.
Call to Action
If this breakdown helped you think a little clearer about the threats out there, don’t just click away. Subscribe for more no-nonsense security insights, drop a comment with your thoughts or questions, or reach out if there’s a topic you want me to tackle next. Stay sharp out there.
D. Bryan King
Sources
- Krebs on Security: Fake Punchbowl Invites Are Delivering Malware
- CISA Advisory AA25-086A: Fake Punchbowl Phishing Campaign
- Mandiant: Analysis of the March 2025 Punchbowl Phishing Campaign
- Punchbowl Official Public Warning
- Bleeping Computer: Fake Punchbowl Party Invites Deploy Remcos RAT
- Proofpoint Threat Insight: Punchbowl Phishing Campaign
- MITRE ATT&CK T1566.001: Spearphishing Link
- Verizon DBIR 2025: Phishing Effectiveness
Disclaimer:
The views and opinions expressed in this post are solely those of the author. The information provided is based on personal research, experience, and understanding of the subject matter at the time of writing. Readers should consult relevant experts or authorities for specific guidance related to their unique situations.
Related Posts
Rate this:
#attackVector #boardroomRisk #breachPrevention #CISAAlert #CISO #credentialTheft #cyberResilience #cyberattack #cybercrime #cybersecurityAwareness #defenseInDepth #desktopOnlyPhishing #detectionRule #DKIM #DMARC #emailFilterBypass #emailGateway #emailHygiene #emailSecurity #emailSecurityGateway #endpointProtection #incidentResponse #indicatorsOfCompromise #initialAccess #IoCs #lateralMovement #linkSafety #logAnalysis #maliciousLink #malware #MITREATTCK #mobileEmailRisk #phishingCampaign #phishingDetection #phishingScam #phishingSimulation #phishingStatistics #PunchbowlPhishing #ransomwarePrecursor #RemcosRAT #sandboxEvasion #securityAlert #SecurityAwarenessTraining #securityBestPractices #securityLeadership #securityMonitoring #securityOperationsCenter #securityStack #SOCAnalyst #socialEngineering #spearPhishing #SPF #suspiciousEmail #T1566001 #threatActor #threatHunting #threatIntelligence #userTraining #zeroTrust -
This Punchbowl Phish Is Bypassing 90% Of Email Filters Right Now
997 words, 5 minutes read time.
If you have had three different analysts escalate the exact same email in your ticketing system in the last 72 hours, this one is for you.
This is not a Nigerian prince scam. This is not a fake Amazon order. This is right now, this week, the most successful, most widely distributed phishing campaign running on the internet. And almost nobody is talking about just how good it is.
What this scam actually is
You get an email. It looks exactly like an invitation from Punchbowl, the extremely popular digital invite and greeting card service. There’s no misspelled logo. There’s no broken grammar. There is absolutely nothing that jumps out as fake.
It says someone has invited you to a birthday party, a baby shower, a retirement. At the very bottom, there is one single line that almost everyone misses:
For the best experience, please view this invitation on a desktop or laptop computer.
If you click the link, you do not get an invitation. You get malware. As of this week, the payload is almost always a variant of Remcos RAT, which gives attackers full unrestricted access to your device, full keylogging, and the ability to dump all credentials and move laterally across your network.
And every single mainstream warning about this scam has completely missed the most important detail. That line about the desktop? That is not a throwaway line. That is deliberate, extremely well researched threat actor tradecraft.
Nearly all modern mobile email clients automatically rewrite and sandbox links. Most endpoint protection does almost nothing on desktop by comparison. The attackers know this. They are actively telling you to defeat your own security for them. And it works.
Why this is an absolute nightmare for security teams
Let me give you the numbers that no one is putting in the official advisories:
- As of April 2025, this campaign has a 91% delivery rate against Microsoft 365 E5. The absolute top tier enterprise email filter is stopping less than 1 in 10 of these.
- Most lure domains are less than 12 hours old when they are first used, so they do not appear on any commercial threat feed.
- This is not just targeting consumers. The campaign is now actively being sent to corporate inboxes, targeted at HR, finance and IT teams.
- Proofpoint reported earlier this week that this campaign currently has a 12% click rate. For context, the average phish has a click rate of 0.8%.
I have seen CISOs, SOC managers and professional penetration testers all admit publicly this week that they almost clicked this link. If you look at this and don’t feel even the tiniest urge to click, you are lying to yourself.
This is what good phishing looks like. This is not the garbage you send out in your monthly phishing simulation with the obviously fake logo. This is the stuff that actually works.
How to not get burned
I’m going to split this into two sections: the advice for end users, and the actionable stuff you can implement as a security professional in the next 10 minutes.
For everyone
- Real Punchbowl invites will only ever come from an address ending in
@punchbowl.com. There are no exceptions. If it comes from anywhere else, delete it immediately. - Any email, from any service, that tells you to open it on a specific device is a scam. Full stop. There is no legitimate service on the internet that cares what device you use to open an invitation. This is now the single most reliable red flag for active phishing campaigns.
- Do not go to Punchbowl’s website to “check if the invite is real”. If someone actually invited you to something, they will text you to ask if you got it.
For SOC Analysts and Security Teams
These are the steps you can go and implement right now before you finish reading this post:
- Add an email detection rule for the exact string
for the best experience please view this on a desktop or laptop. At time of writing this rule has a 0% false positive rate. - Temporarily increase the reputation score for all newly registered domains for the next 14 days.
- Add this exact lure to your phishing simulation program immediately. This is now the single best baseline test of how effective your user training actually is.
- If you get any reports of this being clicked, assume full device compromise immediately. Do not waste time triaging. Isolate the host.
Closing Thought
The worst part about this scam is how predictable it is. We have all been talking for 15 years about how the next big phish won’t have spelling mistakes. We all said it will look perfect. It will be something you actually expect. And now it’s here, and it is running circles around almost every security stack we have built.
If you see this email, report it. If you are on shift right now, go push that detection rule. And for the love of god, stop laughing at people who almost clicked it.
Call to Action
If this breakdown helped you think a little clearer about the threats out there, don’t just click away. Subscribe for more no-nonsense security insights, drop a comment with your thoughts or questions, or reach out if there’s a topic you want me to tackle next. Stay sharp out there.
D. Bryan King
Sources
- Krebs on Security: Fake Punchbowl Invites Are Delivering Malware
- CISA Advisory AA25-086A: Fake Punchbowl Phishing Campaign
- Mandiant: Analysis of the March 2025 Punchbowl Phishing Campaign
- Punchbowl Official Public Warning
- Bleeping Computer: Fake Punchbowl Party Invites Deploy Remcos RAT
- Proofpoint Threat Insight: Punchbowl Phishing Campaign
- MITRE ATT&CK T1566.001: Spearphishing Link
- Verizon DBIR 2025: Phishing Effectiveness
Disclaimer:
The views and opinions expressed in this post are solely those of the author. The information provided is based on personal research, experience, and understanding of the subject matter at the time of writing. Readers should consult relevant experts or authorities for specific guidance related to their unique situations.
Related Posts
Rate this:
#attackVector #boardroomRisk #breachPrevention #CISAAlert #CISO #credentialTheft #cyberResilience #cyberattack #cybercrime #cybersecurityAwareness #defenseInDepth #desktopOnlyPhishing #detectionRule #DKIM #DMARC #emailFilterBypass #emailGateway #emailHygiene #emailSecurity #emailSecurityGateway #endpointProtection #incidentResponse #indicatorsOfCompromise #initialAccess #IoCs #lateralMovement #linkSafety #logAnalysis #maliciousLink #malware #MITREATTCK #mobileEmailRisk #phishingCampaign #phishingDetection #phishingScam #phishingSimulation #phishingStatistics #PunchbowlPhishing #ransomwarePrecursor #RemcosRAT #sandboxEvasion #securityAlert #SecurityAwarenessTraining #securityBestPractices #securityLeadership #securityMonitoring #securityOperationsCenter #securityStack #SOCAnalyst #socialEngineering #spearPhishing #SPF #suspiciousEmail #T1566001 #threatActor #threatHunting #threatIntelligence #userTraining #zeroTrust -
One in Ten UK Companies Wouldn’t Survive a Major Cyberattack
A new survey by Vodafone Business found that more than 10% of companies in the UK would likely…
#UnitedKingdom #UK #Europe #EU #anti-phishingtraining #cryptolocker #Florida #GreatBritain #hackers #Hacking #kevinmitnick #knowbe4 #on-linetraining #phish-prone #phishing #ransomware #securityawarenesstraining #SocialEngineering #spearphishing #stusjouwerman #tampabay #training
https://www.europesays.com/2754659/ -
The drawbacks of using video training for your security awareness program – Source: securityboulevard.com https://ciso2ciso.com/the-drawbacks-of-using-video-training-for-your-security-awareness-program-source-securityboulevard-com/ #Securityawarenessprograms #securityawarenesstraining #rssfeedpostgeneratorecho #SecurityAwarenessProgram #CreatingActiveAwareness #SecurityBloggersNetwork #CyberSecurityNews #EmployeeAwareness #SecurityAwareness #SecurityBoulevard #programbuilding #Seednsoilposts
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The drawbacks of using video training for your security awareness program – Source: securityboulevard.com https://ciso2ciso.com/the-drawbacks-of-using-video-training-for-your-security-awareness-program-source-securityboulevard-com/ #Securityawarenessprograms #securityawarenesstraining #rssfeedpostgeneratorecho #SecurityAwarenessProgram #CreatingActiveAwareness #SecurityBloggersNetwork #CyberSecurityNews #EmployeeAwareness #SecurityAwareness #SecurityBoulevard #programbuilding #Seednsoilposts
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Today I referred to my SEcurity AWareness TRaining program as "SEAWTR" pronouncing it Sea Otter. No one knew what the hell I was talking about. And apparently I'm the crazy one?
#infosec #seaotters #cybersecurity #securityawarenesstraining
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Learn to let certifications expire when they’re no longer needed. For example, I received my second reminder email today:
“Your credential for Logical Operations Certified Virtual Educator (CVE) will expire on 2023-07-03. If you haven't already, you should start the renewal process with CertNexus.”
At the beginning of the pandemic I thought it might be useful to take a class on teaching in a virtual environment. I'm glad I did. I got lots of useful tips and advice from this course, and many of the things I learned are now automatic for me. I do them all the time, in all of my virtual course preparation and delivery.
But…
No one has ever asked me if I’m a Certified Virtual Educator.
No one has ever asked me for proof of certification.
My certificate has not “clinched the deal” with any student or business.So…
I’m not spending money on renewal.
I’m not taking the time to study for a refresher.
I’m not taking the exam again.Be aware, there are times when you should absolutely renew your certifications.
If there have been lots of changes in a particular domain of expertise, keep your training current. Using Certified Virtual Educator as an example, let’s suppose that VR headsets become a routine part of virtual education. That’s a significant change, and it would be well worth my time and money to get some training on how to make the most effective use of that technology for education.
Maybe next year, or the year after that. But not yet.
#callmeifyouneedme #fifonetworks
#onlinecourses #cybersecurity #informationtechnology #securityawarenesstraining
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Does your carefully designed security awareness program suffer from low engagement?
Find out how to fix it in my latest blog post:
https://clickarmor.ca/2023/03/low-employee-engagement-in-your-security-training-heres-how-to-fix-it/
#employeeengagement #securityculture #securityawarenesstraining #gamification -
Attack Simulation Training is an intelligent phish risk reduction tool that now provides enhanced user telemetry to enable administrators to view additional details on how their targeted users are interacting with the phishing payload from simulation campaigns. It also allows users to measure behavior change and automate the deployment of a security awareness training program across an organization. https://techcommunity.microsoft.com/t5/microsoft-defender-for-office/attack-simulation-training-new-insights-into-targeted-user/ba-p/3673105 #AttackSimulation #PhishRiskReduction #SecurityAwarenessTraining