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Domain-Based Message Authentication (DMARC)

An email authentication protocol that builds on SPF and DKIM to protect against email spoofing. DMARC policies tell receiving mail servers how to handle emails that fail authentication checks.

Information Security

Related Frameworks

Frequently Asked Questions

What is Domain-Based Message Authentication (DMARC)?
An email authentication protocol that builds on SPF and DKIM to protect against email spoofing. DMARC policies tell receiving mail servers how to handle emails that fail authentication checks.
Why is Domain-Based Message Authentication (DMARC) important for compliance?
Domain-Based Message Authentication (DMARC) is a key concept in Information Security. Understanding domain-based message authentication (dmarc) helps organizations meet regulatory requirements, reduce risk, and demonstrate due diligence during audits. Our compliance platform covers this concept across 692 frameworks with 819,000+ control mappings.
Where can I learn more about Domain-Based Message Authentication (DMARC)?
Explore our compliance framework pages to see how domain-based message authentication (dmarc) applies across different standards and regulations. Our implementation guides provide step-by-step guidance, and the compliance platform offers AI-powered analysis of how this concept maps across 692 frameworks.

See how Domain-Based Message Authentication (DMARC) applies across compliance frameworks

Our AI-powered platform maps 692 frameworks with 819,000+ control connections. Explore how this concept is addressed across standards.