Justin was panicking. A huge deal was on the line; but try as he might, his company’s email system kept rejecting his attempts to email the final 25-page contract to the client. Then he remembered a Dropbox promotion sent to his personal email. He set up an account and logged in, uploaded the contract, and sent the link to his client. Easy as that, the deal was done. Three weeks later, however, he couldn’t find any files on his computer. After days of troubleshooting, IT discovered his credentials had been stolen. Justin had used his corporate credentials to create a Dropbox account on what turned out to be a spoofed website. All his new client’s information was now exposed, along with details from all his other accounts. How Mimecast Could Have Helped • Mimecast Web Security would have blocked access to the spoofed Dropbox site, preventing Justin from handing over his credentials • Mimecast Large File Send would have allowed Justin to send/receive his contract without leaving Outlook • Mimecast Large File Send would have applied expiry, no print/forward, and an optional password on the file • Mimecast Large File Send would apply content controls to the file to ensure compliance