Closing the Collaboration Security Gap with One-Click Incident Response for the Modern Digital Workplace
For years, the Phish Alert Button has been the standard for turning employees into active security sensors within their email environments. However, as cybercriminals pivot their tactics toward internal collaboration tools, the security perimeter has moved. In a strategic expansion of its human and agentic AI risk management platform, KnowBe4 has announced the launch of the Phish Alert Button (PAB) for Microsoft Teams.
This integration marks a critical milestone in collaboration security, empowering over 100 million users to subject internal chat messages to the same level of scrutiny and instant reporting previously reserved for email.
There is a psychological bias in the modern workplace: employees tend to view internal chat platforms as safe zones compared to the high-noise environment of the inbox. Threat actors are actively exploiting this trust through sophisticated callback phishing and social engineering tactics designed to circumvent traditional security layers.
- Security teams can now manage reported threats from both email and Teams within a single, synchronized workflow.
- By providing a familiar, one-click mechanism, organizations lower the barrier for employees to report suspicious links or unusual requests.
- The PAB ensures that sophisticated AI-driven social engineering, which often starts in an email and migrates to a chat, can be intercepted at any stage of the kill chain.
The philosophy behind KnowBe4’s expansion is rooted in Human Risk Management. Rather than relying solely on automated filters that can be bypassed by generative AI, the Phish Alert Button leverages the collective intelligence of the workforce. When a message is reported, it is immediately forwarded to the organization’s incident response team for analysis, effectively turning every employee into a real-time security sensor.
“Cybercriminals are no longer just targeting the inbox; they are actively infiltrating the chat applications we rely on daily,” says Greg Kras, Chief Product Officer at KnowBe4. “We are ensuring collaboration tools receive the same level of scrutiny and incident response.”
As organizations move toward more autonomous and agentic workflows, the human layer remains the most versatile defense mechanism. The integration of the Phish Alert Button into Microsoft Teams provides the visibility and context necessary to defend the high-velocity communication channels that power the modern enterprise.





























