Gmail Account Login: Google has announced that it will be moving Gmail to a strict DMARC policy starting in June 2016.

The
idea is to thwart cybercriminals who hack into user accounts and then
scrape the address books; they then use a different server to spoof
messages from the hacked user to his or her own contacts. They do this
for spam and fraud purposes, for phishing and to spread malware.
DMARC.org
is an initiative of the Trusted Domain Project (TDP), a non-profit and
tax-exempt public benefit corporation, and is supported by the following
sponsors: Agari, Comcast (NASDAQ: CMCSA), Farsight Security, Google,
PayPal (NASDAQ: PYPL), and ReturnPath. DMARC.org is dedicated to
promoting the use of DMARC and related email authentication technologies
to reduce fraudulent email, in a way that can be sustained at Internet
scale.
The news follows Yahoo’s
announcement that it would expand its use of DMARC to protect users of
the ymail.com and rocketmail.com services by November 2, with more
coverage to be added to additional domains in the coming months.
DMARC is
also taking steps to address the downsides of using the specification.
When Yahoo and AOL began protecting their customers from abuse, there
was a small percentage of users who were negatively impacted by the
change. To address these issues, several workarounds were quickly
deployed by service providers and mailing lists, and two long-term
solutions were submitted to the IETF for consideration. One of these,
the Authenticated Received Chain (ARC), is being presented at the
Messaging, Malware and Mobile Anti-Abuse Working Group (M3AAWG) meeting
in Atlanta. The goal is to engage the technical community in helping to
refine and test the proposed solution with deployers such as Google,
Microsoft and Yahoo, with an interoperability event being organized for
the first quarter of 2016.
“We are
pleased to be supporting the ARC protocol to help mailing list operators
adapt to the need for strong authentication,” said John Rae-Grant, lead
product manager for Gmail.
“More and
more companies have been adopting DMARC and email authentication over
the past few years, with more vendors and service providers adding the
necessary support to their offerings in order to make that adoption
simpler,” said Steven Jones, executive director of DMARC.org. “With new
protocols like ARC emerging to address the traditional email use cases
that were problematic under some DMARC policies, and the leadership of
forward-thinking companies like Google, Microsoft and Yahoo, I expect to
see the rate of adoption accelerate globally.”
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