PayPal, eBay and Gmail have teamed up
to try and limit the amount of spam or phishing mails that their customers
receive.
As of today customers of either PayPal or
eBay, that have Gmail accounts, will be
protected from malicious mails thanks to the use of email authentication, the
firms said. In this case the firms will be using DomainKeys and DomainKeys
Identified Mail (DKIM) tools.
In a statement the firms said, "DomainKeys technology adds another layer to
spam and phishing protections by allowing Internet service providers to
determine if messages are real and decide if they should be delivered to a
customer’s inbox. The collaboration between eBay, PayPal and Gmail will lower
consumers’ risk of being victims of phishing attacks through the reduction of
fraudulent e-mail consumers receive."
Brad Taylor, senior staff software engineer in charge of
Gmail’s anti-spam efforts added, ”we’re
always looking for ways to eliminate unwanted e-mail from our users’ inboxes.
Phishing is an especially nasty form of spam, so we appreciate having another
weapon in our arsenal against it. We’re glad to be working with eBay and PayPal
to protect our users.”
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