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Ninja Cat Giveaway: Episode 2 | Mastering email authentication and slashing overrides: Part 2
For this episode, your opportunity to win a plush ninja cat is the following -
Reply to this thread with: Did you spot ninja cat throughout episode? Mention your favorite on-screen ninja cat appearance in this episode along with one thing you’ve learned from this episode of the Ninja Show!
This offer is non-transferable and cannot be combined with any other offer. This offer ends on April 14th, 2023, or until supplies are exhausted and is not redeemable for cash. Taxes, if there are any, are the sole responsibility of the recipient. Any gift returned as non-deliverable will not be re-sent. Please allow 6-8 weeks for shipment of your gift. Microsoft reserves the right to cancel, change, or suspend this offer at any time without notice. Offer void in Cuba, Iran, North Korea, Sudan, Syria, Region of Crimea, Russia, and where prohibited.
54 Replies
- lukepessoaCopper Contributor
My favorite appearance o Ninja Cat during this episode was when he climbed down a rope behind Paul's back.
- michaelblanchard
Microsoft
The ninja cat going down the line was awesome. I liked the information on just SPF and DKIM are not good enough, you need to have the DMARC entry for complete safety. - JamieLiu5005Brass ContributorI love the plush cat that was chased by the dog, very funny and cute.
I've had hands-on experience with SPF, DKIM and DMARC, the session was a good opportunity for me to review all of them one more time. I also learned that there are two different sender addresses P1 and P2. The one is used in the transmission phase during the protocol, the other one is introduced in the message header during the actual transmission of the data. What we see in the email From is a P2 sender address. And P1 address can be found in message header. - Joshua_R_JonesIron Contributor(a bit late to the party, sorry!) I liked the ninja cat running across the top of the screens the most- he's got places to go, sushi to eat!
The biggest takeaway for me was truly the concept of Zero Trust. Just because we trust our vendor, does not mean they have an air-tight solution on their end. Anyone can be compromised at anytime, so it makes sense to Trust No One and Verify Everyone!
This was a lot of fun and I enjoyed the casual setting. Thank you! - tayamamCopper ContributorHi, Thank you for your great video 🙂
In this video part 14:080-, I've understood that security admin can use advanced hunting to search malicious /blocked emails, and there are many sample KQL queries (EmailEvents) in microsoft learn, it's soo helpful.
Anyway, I love ninja cat ! I'd like to want to get this ! - Duncan de WaalBrass ContributorSo that is definitely Cat1 that shows in the Advanced Hunting query around the ExchangeTransportRule! Paul's comment makes it perfect.
What I learned apart of the Advanced Hunting is a bunch of handy aka.ms shortcuts to quickly lookup how it all works, thanks for that! - Jimmy SalianCopper Contributor
HeikeRitter Yes few places Ninja Cat was spotted and the best place was pop up behind the frame, the adhoc run on the screen, rope one was slick. I learnt that we should not trust anyone to allow list whether it is vendor, customer and anyone over the internet. We can addition criteria sending IP address, we can set spam confidence levels to secure and control the spam checking. The advance hunting look and feel demo was excellent too.
HeikeRitterThe Ninja behind the painting was clever and unexpected. Learning some more about ARC sealers is cool, and I'll definitely be able to use some of what I learnt in this episode with the M365 tenants I manage for my clients.
- chmod771Copper ContributorI liked Ninja Cat peaking behind the picture on the wall.
I learned that even if spam filters are bypassed the email is still scanned for malware. - marcoheijkoopCopper ContributorI love the version where the dog :dog_face: runs behind the 🥷 :cat: The whole episode is interesting. I must check the KQL queries again. I handle the review of quarantine mail of a big customer. So with this information i can finetune the spam