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Accept & CloseInstead, the email says: “Please reply to this message to confirm your approval for invoice #4421.” The user replies. The attacker then engages in a conversational, low-and-slow confidence scam, eventually extracting credentials or payment details via a clean, manually typed URL. Because there was no initial malicious link, the simulation never happened. The attacker didn’t need to trick the click; they tricked the conversation. Perhaps the most elegant outflank of Terranova’s desktop-focused training is the rise of QR code phishing .
Here is how the new generation of social engineering is bypassing one of the world’s premier security awareness platforms. Terranova’s simulations excel at teaching users to scrutinize sender addresses, check for misspellings, and hover over links. Attackers have responded with compromised internal accounts .
An email arrives that looks like a multi-factor authentication prompt or a shared document notification. It contains a benign-looking QR code. The user is trained to check URLs—but a QR code hides the destination. They scan it with their personal phone, which lacks the corporate email security filter. The phone opens a perfect replica of the Microsoft 365 login page. The user enters their credentials. The attacker now has them.
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