The FBI, State Department and National Security Agency issued a warning about attempts by North Korean state-sponsored cyberthreat actors to exploit improperly configured domain-based message authentication, reporting and conformance record policies to conceal social engineering attempts. Without properly configured DMARC policies, malicious cyber actors are able to send spoofed emails as if they came from a legitimate domain鈥檚 email exchange, the advisory states. The cyber actors have conducted spear phishing campaigns posing as journalists, academics or other experts in East Asian affairs with credible links to North Korean policy circles.

鈥淏eyond the threat from North Korea, we have seen all types of nefarious cyber actors exploit improperly configured domain-based message authentication to send hospitals and health systems 鈥榮poofed鈥 phishing emails,鈥 said John Riggi, AHA鈥檚 national advisor for cybersecurity and risk. 鈥淭his alert serves as a good reminder to ensure this basic cybersecurity protocol is properly configured to ensure that when the bad guys send staff or our contacts an email that appears to be from (someone known)@(your organization).org it will fail the validation test of DMARC and flagged as suspicious  (someone unknown)@(unknown organization).org. Stay vigilant and up to date on basic cybersecurity protocols and ensure phishing email tests and cyber education continue with staff, as our criminal and nation state adversaries are becoming increasingly aggressive and creative in their social engineering techniques.鈥

For more information on this or other cyber and risk issues, contact Riggi at鈥jriggi@aha.org. For the latest cyber and risk resources and threat intelligence, visit鈥aha.org/cybersecurity.

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