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Phishing is when a criminal sends a deceptive email, text message, or social media message pretending to be from a legitimate company or person you trust (like your bank, a delivery service, or even your boss). Their goal is to trick you into revealing sensitive information like passwords, credit card numbers, or confidential company data.
A fire drill. A phishing simulation is like a fire drill for cybersecurity. Aurguard will send a safe, harmless, fake phishing email to your staff. It looks like a real threat, but it's just a test. The purpose isn't to trick you, but to give you a chance to practice spotting and reporting suspicious emails in a controlled environment without any real risk.
Absolutely not!! There should be no negative consequences for clicking. It's a learning opportunity. If you or your staff click on a link or open an attachment in one of our simulation emails, you'll simply be directed to a page that lets you know it was a simulation and provides some helpful tips on what to look for next time. The goal is education.
Yes! The results are used to help your business leaders understand the company's overall preparedness. The report will look at general, anonymous trends.
"Attack surface". Imagine your business is a castle. Your digital borders (or "attack surface") are all the possible ways an invader could try to get in: the main gate, the windows, the small back doors, the secret tunnels, even the walls themselves.
In the digital world, your attack surface includes all your internet-facing assets that a cybercriminal could potentially target. This includes your website, email servers, laptops, phones, and office wifi. It's the sum of all your digital "doors and windows."
Yes. Digital Borders Testing or Attack Surface Review is like hiring a security expert to create a complete map of your castle (your business) and inspect every potential entry point. Aurguard systematically search for all of your digital assets (even ones you might have forgotten about) to understand exactly what is visible to potential attackers and how secure it is.
No. A firewall is like having a strong lock on your front door, which is great! But what about the unlocked window on the second floor, or the old service tunnel no one uses anymore? Businesses grow and change, and it's easy to lose track of every system connected to the internet. Digital Borders Testing helps us find "forgotten" entry points. It is a proactive step to ensure you have a complete and accurate picture of your security, rather than just protecting the front door.