Today's phishing tests more closely resemble the fire drills of the early days, which were more like fire evacuation drills - sprung upon a building's residents with no warning and later blaming them as individuals for their failures.
Google's Matt Linton suggests that phishing tests should be replaced by a more organized approach akin to fire drills, where the focus is on overall infrastructure improvement rather than individual blame.
Despite anti-phishing controls in security products, Zscaler's report indicates a 58% increase in phishing attacks, with cybercriminals leveraging AI. FedRAMP encourages testing users as the last line of defense.
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