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New Microsoft Teams feature will let you report suspicious calls. Microsoft plans to introduce a call reporting feature in Teams by mid-March, allowing users to flag suspicious or unwanted calls as potential scams or phishing attempts. The new "Report a Call" function will be enabled by default, but administrators who want to disable the new security feature can toggle off "Report a Call" in the Teams Admin Center under "Calling settings." The feature will be available in Teams call history for one-to-one calls on Windows, Mac, and web, and it will let users click "More options" next to any call and select "Report a Call" to submit a report. As Microsoft explained, when users flag a call, limited metadata (including timestamps, duration, caller ID information, and participant Teams IDs) will be shared with the organization and Microsoft. "Currently, users have no simple way to report suspicious calls, leaving organizations without visibility into these threats and without clear guidance on how users should respond," Microsoft said in a message center update. "Reports share limited call metadata with organizations and Microsoft, viewable in Microsoft Defender portal or Teams Admin Center. The feature is enabled by default but can be disabled by admins." The feature will roll out to Targeted Release customers in mid-March, with completion expected by late March, and it will reach general availability worldwide by late April. Security teams with Defender for Office 365 (Plan 1 or Plan 2) or Defender XDR licenses can view detailed reported instances in the Microsoft Defender portal, while organizations without Defender licenses will be able to access basic submission data in Teams Admin Center under Protection Reports. In November, Microsoft also rolled out a new Teams security feature that allows users to report false-positive threat alerts triggered by messages incorrectly flagged as malicious. More recently, it announced that admins can now block external users via the Defender portal, an option designed to thwart cybercrime gangs (including ransomware groups) attempts to abuse Teams in social engineering attacks targeting victims' employees. The company also announced new fraud protection features for Teams calls that will start rolling out in mid-February, warning users about external callers who attempt to impersonate trusted organizations in social engineering attacks. Secrets Security Cheat Sheet: From Sprawl to Control Whether you're cleaning up old keys or setting guardrails for AI-generated code, this guide helps your team build securely from the start. Get the cheat sheet and take the guesswork out of secrets management.

Daily Brief Summary

CYBERCRIME // Microsoft Teams Introduces Feature to Report Suspicious Calls Globally

Microsoft is launching a feature in Teams allowing users to report suspicious calls, aiming to combat potential scams and phishing attempts within the platform.

The "Report a Call" feature will be enabled by default, with administrators having the option to disable it via the Teams Admin Center.

Available for one-to-one calls on Windows, Mac, and web, users can flag calls by selecting "Report a Call" from the call history.

When a call is reported, limited metadata is shared with the user's organization and Microsoft, enhancing visibility into potential threats.

The feature will initially roll out to Targeted Release customers in mid-March, with global availability expected by late April.

Organizations with Defender for Office 365 or Defender XDR licenses can access detailed reports, while others will receive basic data in the Teams Admin Center.

This initiative follows recent security enhancements in Teams, including the ability to report false-positive threat alerts and block external users to prevent cybercrime.