According to a recent LinkedIn post from Intezer, the company is highlighting shifting phishing tactics that increasingly rely on links and social engineering rather than file attachments. The post cites internal research indicating that only 6% of phishing attempts in the past year included attachments, while 30% used links and many more depended on language-based lures.
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The post suggests that this evolution may reduce the effectiveness of traditional email security tools focused on attachment analysis and static indicators. It notes that phishing is also moving into the browser, where monitoring is often weaker than on endpoints, and that when attachments are used, they are frequently embedded in formats such as SVGs, PDFs, and Open XML files to evade detection.
Intezer’s emphasis on understanding language, context, and intent for phishing detection points to a strategic focus on more advanced, possibly AI-driven security capabilities. For investors, this positioning could align the company with a growing segment of the cybersecurity market that seeks to address sophisticated, socially engineered threats, potentially supporting demand for its solutions as enterprises reassess their defenses.
As shared in the post, Intezer promotes a recent AI SOC Live session for further insights, signaling ongoing thought-leadership efforts in security operations and phishing defense. While no specific products, revenue figures, or customer wins are mentioned, the focus on evolving threats and detection methodologies may indicate where future product development and marketing investments are being directed.

