Medido el 2026-07-11 · DNS público

¿Está chase.com protegido contra la suplantación de correo?

Sí — chase.com aplica DMARC (p=reject).

Postura sin cambios desde el 2026-06-19

Más protegido que el 37 % de bancos en Estados Unidos

El 80 % del sector ya aplica p=reject

Ver el barómetro sectorial

A

DMARC

p=reject

SPF

-all

DKIM

ninguno encontrado

BIMI + marca verificada (VMC) — tu logo, autenticado

Cómo corregirlo

Thomas, tu CISO virtual con IA, identifica cada fuente, escribe el DNS exacto y lleva tu dominio de p=none a p=reject con total seguridad.

Registro publicado

v=DMARC1; p=reject; pct=100; rua=mailto:d@rua.agari.com; ruf=mailto:d@ruf.agari.com;

Qué significa esto

  • Politique p=reject : protection maximale contre l’usurpation.
  • Aucune clé DKIM trouvée sur les sélecteurs courants (le domaine peut utiliser des sélecteurs non standards).

Historial

  • 2026-06-26Primera mediciónProtegido (p=reject)

Sobre Chase

Chase is a French organization operating from the domain chase.com, playing a significant role within the French digital ecosystem. As an organizational entity, Chase manages a complex email perimeter encompassing internal communications with its workforce, exchanges with business partners, and its entire official correspondence. This domain constitutes a critical trust vector for the organization. Securing the chase.com domain carries major strategic importance amid contemporary threats of digital identity spoofing. Cybercriminals regularly target domains of established organizations to execute sophisticated phishing campaigns, compromising the reputation and trust afforded to the legitimate organization. For a French organization of this scale, regulatory obligations regarding digital security are substantial. The NIS2 Directive (Network and Information Security Directive) imposes strengthened requirements for protecting critical infrastructure and resilience against cyberattacks. For entities operating in specific sectors, the DORA regulation (Digital Operational Resilience Act) introduces additional constraints on the security of digital financial services. The DMARC protocol (Domain-based Message Authentication, Reporting and Conformance) represents a foundational element of Chase's email security strategy. By authenticating messages sent from chase.com through SPF and DKIM, DMARC provides demonstrable protection against domain spoofing and enables the organization to control handling of unauthenticated messages. This rigorous implementation proves essential for preserving the credibility of official communications and maintaining recipient trust against emerging fraud risks. Email authentication mechanisms directly support Chase's ability to comply with evolving regulatory frameworks while protecting its digital reputation.

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