Blog

Add Private Notes for CC and BCC Recipients of Any Email

April 18, 2022 / in Blog / by Zafar Khan, RPost CEO

SideNote Gives Context and Instructions to the Copied Recipients on Important Emails. If you can remember a time before text messaging, you probably remember one of your friends or family members (or maybe you?) asking, ‘why should I use this feature when I can just call someone?’ Texting used to be a very clunky process. […]

Can You Serve Court Papers by Email?

April 11, 2022 / in Blog / by Zafar Khan, RPost CEO

The $100 million “Hermès” Registered Email™ Message (& CLE Webinar That Tells More) What a deal! My favorite functional yachting sportswear at 70% off! Or so I thought. Nearly every successful product brand is facing a strange new competitor — their own “fake” self. Let me explain how this plays out.

How to Automatically Encrypt Emails in Outlook

April 04, 2022 / in Blog / by Zafar Khan, RPost CEO

RMail Takes the Fear Out of Sending Encrypted Emails via Automation and Ease-of-use It’s April Fools, and this year I thought I’d ask, which of the following tall tales is closer to the truth? RPost will be debuting a new in-store retail experience called RCafe where you can come in, hook your laptop up to our secure network, have […]

Tackling Business Email Compromise (BEC) Email Impostors

March 28, 2022 / in Blog / by Zafar Khan, RPost CEO

The RMail Domain Age Detector Alerts Senders Before They Reply to BEC Domain Lures Now that many of us are going back into the office (for now), some of those tried-and-true office quips are making a comeback. Ask your colleague how they’re doing, and they’ll say sarcastically, “living the dream.” Then there’s the one where […]

How to Prevent Business Email Compromise (BEC) Attacks

March 21, 2022 / in Blog / by Zafar Khan, RPost CEO

RMail’s Right Recipient Feature Helps Prevent BEC Attacks on Vulnerable Staff In honor of the return of baseball for the 2022 season, which was until recently in doubt due to a prolonged labor dispute, I’d like to revisit the now immortal words of one baseball’s most infamous managers.