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From: Microsoft account team [email protected] Sent: Monday, April 3, 2017 3:36 AM. Subject: Microsoft account security alert. Other places online have similarly conflicting info.
In other words, for inbound email, Microsoft 365 treats p=reject and p=quarantine the same way. Admins can define the action to take on messages classified as spoof within the anti-phishing policy. Microsoft 365 is configured like this because some legitimate email may fail DMARC. ...
Apparently Microsoft refers to microsoft accounts by external email names used to create them. Given that, it could indeed be legit, but the way it's handled by Microsoft looks just like fraud. Examine the raw message with headers to determine reality if possible.
I cleared my browser's browsing history and also Bing's browsing history for my work account. I am sure I saw some ads while I was browsing in some websites. I am using Microsoft products (Word, PPT, Excel and...) on my personal laptop with my work account.
@user1, "The email was sent from [email protected]. Doing a WhoIs on clickdimensions.com I can see no connection to Microsoft". That's hardly surprising, as clickdimensions.microsoft.com is a subdomain of microsoft.com, whereas clickdimensions.com is a different domain altogether.
In the last few days, i received emails from Microsoft with login codes. AFAIK Microsoft login works without password but with sending those codes to an alternate email. In this email, Microsoft states, that if I didn't try to log in I should just ignore this email. But should I really, if it happens every few hours, like 4 times per day?
You should always use different emails for different accounts. Depending on the accounts you use, if the number of your emails is quite limited, you should group the accounts of the same security level. This way, attackers won't know which email to use at once. I think Outlook supports multiple emails for the same account. It's not too ...
This morning I got a text and an email from Microsoft saying that someone else MAY be using my account and a link to review my activity. I was at work so I left the notification there to check it out later, but about half an hour later I got another text and email saying that my password has been compromised and a link to change my password.
The address looks legit ([email protected]) but the problem is, the email address they refer to in the body of the email is not a Microsoft address. As a matter of fact, it's an @mac.com address. Everything I have seen in the community seems to indicate the email is legit, but why would I get a security alert from Microsoft for an @mac account?
The email urges me to visit OneDrive to reactivate my account before a date roughly 3 months from now so I may keep my account. Seems reasonable. What gives me pause: The email does not use my (fake) name associated with the account, or any name at all. The links go to onedrive.com, whereas onedrive is typically accessed from onedrive.live.com