Tag: Microsoft 365
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Microsoft Warns of Rising PhaaS Attacks in 365 Environments
Microsoft Warns of Growing PhaaS Attacks in 365 Environments Microsoft has issued a warning about a surge in phishing campaigns that leverage PhaaS (phishing-as-a-service) techniques to impersonate trusted organizations. Unlike traditional spam, these attacks exploit misconfigured email routing and weak authentication settings to craft internal-looking emails that bypass casual scrutiny. The result is a higher…
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Rising PhaaS Attacks Lift the Veil on Microsoft 365 Phishing
Rising PhaaS Attacks Target Microsoft 365 Environments Security researchers warn of a growing trend in phishing: phishing as a service (PhaaS) campaigns that spoof organizations’ own domains to deliver highly credible emails within Microsoft 365 environments. Unlike generic scams, these attacks leverage legitimate-looking domains and internal routing patterns to bypass casual scrutiny, making them particularly…
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PhaaS Attacks in Microsoft 365: Rising Email Threats
What is PhaaS and why it matters in Microsoft 365 Phishing-as-a-Service (PhaaS) refers to ready-made phishing platforms that enable attackers to launch convincing email campaigns with minimal technical effort. In Microsoft 365 environments, these campaigns increasingly imitate trusted internal communications by spoofing an organization’s own domains. The result is emails that look legitimate at a…
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No, Microsoft Office Didn’t Just Get Named Microsoft 365 Copilot
Clear up the confusion: What is Microsoft 365 Copilot? A surge of social media posts claimed that Microsoft had renamed its Office suite to “Microsoft 365 Copilot.” If you’ve seen similar headlines, you’re not alone. The reality is more nuanced: Copilot is an AI-powered assistant integrated into Microsoft 365 apps, not a blanket renaming of…
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No, Microsoft Office Didn’t Get Renamed to Microsoft 365 Copilot
Separating branding from features If you’ve scrolled through social feeds recently, you may have seen headlines claiming that Microsoft has renamed its entire Office suite to “Microsoft 365 Copilot.” The rumor sounds dramatic, but it’s not a simple rename of the classic Office apps. What’s actually happening is a branding and feature shift around Microsoft…
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Windows 10 End of Support: Office and Server Migrations
Windows 10 End of Support: A broader migration wave follows the headlines Microsoft’s October support changes hit a notable milestone: Windows 10 support has effectively ended for most customers. But the real story runs deeper than a single operating system retirement. Along with Windows 10, several key Microsoft products—Office 2019, Office 2016, Exchange Server 2019,…
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Windows 10 End of Support Sparks Enterprise Migration Questions
Windows 10 reaches end of support—and more patches fade away Microsoft’s October support changes look like a headline about Windows 10, but the fallout runs deeper. While the public narrative centers on Windows 10’s end of free support, several other long‑standing products are also stepping off the maintenance stage. For IT teams, the timing forces…
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Windows 10 End of Support: Office and Server EOL Migrations
Windows 10 End of Support: The Headline Act Microsoft’s October support changes read like a drumbeat you can’t ignore. While the public focus was fixed on Windows 10 reaching its end of life for most customers, the real impact runs deeper. Beyond Windows 10, older Office suites and on‑premises servers were also cut loose, accelerating…
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Why Windows Autopilot is a Must-Have for Growing Businesses
What is Windows Autopilot? Imagine a Friday afternoon where a new hire is joining by Monday and every minute counts. Traditional device setup would require imaging, software installs, VPN configurations, and security policies—an arduous, time-consuming process. Enter Windows Autopilot, a cloud-driven solution that transforms new devices from factory-fresh to business-ready with minimal IT touch. For…
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OneDrive Facial Recognition: How Often You Can Toggle the Feature
Microsoft OneDrive’s Facial Recognition Feature Faces a Toggle Limit Microsoft is testing a facial-recognition tool in OneDrive intended to help users organize photos by the people in them. The feature, which is enabled by default for those in the preview, adds a new privacy toggle under Settings > Privacy and permissions. Its purpose is to…
