Results for adsab.on.ca
Analysis performed on April 15, 2026 at 02:56 PM
SPF
Warningv=spf1 mx a:mail.adsab.on.ca ip4:209.91.151.171 ip4:209.91.151.163 include:_spf.vianet.ca include:spf.protection.outlook.com ~allDKIM
OKSelectors: selector1, selector2DMARC
Warningv=DMARC1; p=quarantine; pct=100; rua=mailto:ee6844e7@mxtoolbox.dmarc-report.com,mailto:gmqvmslc@ag.ca.dmarcian.com,mailto:dmarc-reports@adsab.on.ca; ruf=mailto:dmarc-reports-forensic@adsab.on.ca,mailto:ee6844e7@forensics.dmarc-report.com,mailto:gmqvmslc@fr.ca.dmarcian.com; fo=1;MX
OKadsab-on-ca.mail.eo.outlook.comRecommendations
1Upgrade your DMARC policy from p=quarantine to p=reject for full blocking
With p=quarantine, spoofed emails are sent to spam instead of being blocked outright. Some recipients still check spam folders, and sophisticated attacks can be flagged as legitimate by users. p=reject ensures fraudulent emails never reach any folder.
2Harden your SPF by replacing ~all with -all (hardfail)
With ~all (softfail), unauthorized senders are flagged but emails are usually still delivered. Switching to -all (hardfail) explicitly tells receiving servers to reject emails from unauthorized sources, providing much stronger protection against spoofing.
3Add MTA-STS to enforce TLS encryption for incoming emails
Without MTA-STS, an attacker performing a man-in-the-middle attack can downgrade the connection between mail servers to plaintext, intercepting emails in transit. MTA-STS tells sending servers to only deliver via TLS with a valid certificate, preventing downgrade attacks.
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Display your email security score on your website.
<a href="https://spoofchecker.online/en/email-security/adsab.on.ca" target="_blank" rel="noopener"><img src="https://spoofchecker.online/api/badge/adsab.on.ca?score=72&grade=B" alt="Email security score for adsab.on.ca" height="28"></a>