Difference between revisions of "TN2"

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* demanding money (including virtual currencies),
 
* demanding money (including virtual currencies),
 
* creating a sense of urgency or panic,
 
* creating a sense of urgency or panic,
* attepting to embarress or blackmail you,
+
* attempting to embarrass or blackmail you,
 
* asking for or using your personal information (including passwords!), and
 
* asking for or using your personal information (including passwords!), and
 
* making promises too good to be true.
 
* making promises too good to be true.
   
Note that sophisicated scams try to convince you they know everything about you. They use your email address. They may know a password of your from some other site that has been breached.
+
Note that sophisicated scams try to convince you they know everything about you. They use your email address. They may know a password from some other site that has been breached.
   
 
== What Should I Do? ==
 
== What Should I Do? ==
   
In most cases, the best thing to do is ignore the email. Your address was probably mass generated by the spammer or bought from a data leak on some other site to whom you gave your address. Don't worry. Your email address is not a secret and there is no security implication to it being public.
+
In most cases, the best thing to do is ignore the email. Your address was probably mass generated by the spammer, or leaked from some other site. Don't worry. Your email address is not a secret and there is no security implication to it being public.
   
 
Don't try and reply to the scam. The sender's address is probably fake or misappropriated. If you somehow succeed, you are just [https://www.ted.com/talks/james_veitch_this_is_what_happens_when_you_reply_to_spam_email guaranteeing more spam].
 
Don't try and reply to the scam. The sender's address is probably fake or misappropriated. If you somehow succeed, you are just [https://www.ted.com/talks/james_veitch_this_is_what_happens_when_you_reply_to_spam_email guaranteeing more spam].
   
 
== Thinking About Passwords ==
 
== Thinking About Passwords ==
You really don't want a scammer breaking into your email account. For one, they will use your account to hurt others. Worse still, they may use information in your account against you in a targeted attack. These are not nice people. Here's some simple rules:
+
You really don't want a scammer breaking into your email account. For one, they will use your account to hurt others. Worse still, they may use information in your account against you in a targeted attack. These are not nice people.
  +
  +
The most effective things you can do are:
 
* Choose hard to guess passwords. Random and long is good.
 
* Choose hard to guess passwords. Random and long is good.
  +
* Only generate passwords locally. Don't trust online services that offer to this.
 
* Use a different password for each account. You don't want to lose everything becuase some lousy social networking site got breached.
 
* Use a different password for each account. You don't want to lose everything becuase some lousy social networking site got breached.
   

Latest revision as of 14:32, 12 July 2020

Email Scams

Beware! There are many email scams and they are always evolving. The major reasons that email is attractive to scammers are:

How Do I Recognise a Scam?

Scams are the same online and offline. The scammer wants to take something valuable from you. Some key tells are:

  • demanding money (including virtual currencies),
  • creating a sense of urgency or panic,
  • attempting to embarrass or blackmail you,
  • asking for or using your personal information (including passwords!), and
  • making promises too good to be true.

Note that sophisicated scams try to convince you they know everything about you. They use your email address. They may know a password from some other site that has been breached.

What Should I Do?

In most cases, the best thing to do is ignore the email. Your address was probably mass generated by the spammer, or leaked from some other site. Don't worry. Your email address is not a secret and there is no security implication to it being public.

Don't try and reply to the scam. The sender's address is probably fake or misappropriated. If you somehow succeed, you are just guaranteeing more spam.

Thinking About Passwords

You really don't want a scammer breaking into your email account. For one, they will use your account to hurt others. Worse still, they may use information in your account against you in a targeted attack. These are not nice people.

The most effective things you can do are:

  • Choose hard to guess passwords. Random and long is good.
  • Only generate passwords locally. Don't trust online services that offer to this.
  • Use a different password for each account. You don't want to lose everything becuase some lousy social networking site got breached.

Modern browsers can generate and remember passwords so you don't have to.