Manage DMARC authentication for incoming emails Domain-based Message Authentication, Reporting, and Conformance (DMARC) is a standard email authentication method that helps protect email senders and recipients from fraudulent emails or spoofing and phishing attacks. DMARC helps you protect your email servers and avoid service interruptions by stopping fraudulent emails. With DMARC, you can authenticate the incoming DKIM email signatures and SPF domain validation results. Use the DMARC feature to help secure email communications, prevent spoofing of your domain, and guide your organization's further action on unauthenticated messages. Manage DMARC authentication for more security and better email deliverability with this powerful, automated solution. Get detailed reports on messages that pass and fail DMARC authentication, including a weekly digest to help you stay on top of any issues. Spoofing and phishing Spoofing and phishing are two common types of online fraud. Spoofing is when someone sends an email from a forged email address. Spoofed emails are often used for malicious purposes like sending false information or infecting a computer with malware. They can also be part of a phishing attack which is a scam designed to trick someone into providing sensitive information such as passwords or credit card details. How DMARC prevents spoofing DMARC verifies that the identity of the sender that the recipient sees matches the identity that’s shown to the receiving server. It also tells the server what to do if an email doesn’t pass authentication checks, for example, to block the email. DMARC is an award-winning solution for stopping phishing and spoofing before the damage can be done. It verifies the identity of the sender that the recipient sees matches the identity that’s shown to the receiving server. It also tells the server what to do if an email doesn’t pass authentication checks, for example, to block the email. DMARC ensures that the email you send and receive is from a trusted source. It tells the receiving server what to do if an email doesn’t pass authentication checks, for example, to block the email. DMARC verifies that the identity of the sender that the recipient sees matches the identity that’s shown to the receiving server. DMARC is important for both marketers and security teams because it reduces the risk of phishing, spoofing, and other email attacks. DMARC in Service Management Enabling DMARC authentication for incoming emails helps keep your site data safe. Once you've enabled DMARC, any incoming email that doesn't pass authentication checks will be rejected, so you won't receive any emails spoofing your domain. If this is a concern, you can disable DMARC and rely on SPF and DKIM checks instead. Disabling DMARC may make your site less secure. Enabling DMARC may block some legitimate email to your site.