I received a phishing email claiming to be from Disney Plus saying that my payment method needs to be updated.
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I received a phishing email claiming to be from Disney Plus saying that my payment method needs to be updated. The email had several red flags, including a link to supposedly update my payment method which clearly does not go to Disney Plus. People should always examine links in emails before activating them. In fact, it's best to just open the Web site in question directly without clicking a link in an email to see if a problem really does exist. JAWS users can move to the link in question and press insert+f1 to examine the URL. NVDA users can press insert+K twice quickly to do this.
I tried locating an email from Disney Plus's help page on this topic to send the scam email to Disney but their help page doesn't list one. They're more interested in warning people about such scams more so than attempting to shut them down. -
I received a phishing email claiming to be from Disney Plus saying that my payment method needs to be updated. The email had several red flags, including a link to supposedly update my payment method which clearly does not go to Disney Plus. People should always examine links in emails before activating them. In fact, it's best to just open the Web site in question directly without clicking a link in an email to see if a problem really does exist. JAWS users can move to the link in question and press insert+f1 to examine the URL. NVDA users can press insert+K twice quickly to do this.
I tried locating an email from Disney Plus's help page on this topic to send the scam email to Disney but their help page doesn't list one. They're more interested in warning people about such scams more so than attempting to shut them down.@DavidGoldfield I'd better press Ctrl+Insert+F7 with JAWS, but yeah, you're right.
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I received a phishing email claiming to be from Disney Plus saying that my payment method needs to be updated. The email had several red flags, including a link to supposedly update my payment method which clearly does not go to Disney Plus. People should always examine links in emails before activating them. In fact, it's best to just open the Web site in question directly without clicking a link in an email to see if a problem really does exist. JAWS users can move to the link in question and press insert+f1 to examine the URL. NVDA users can press insert+K twice quickly to do this.
I tried locating an email from Disney Plus's help page on this topic to send the scam email to Disney but their help page doesn't list one. They're more interested in warning people about such scams more so than attempting to shut them down.@DavidGoldfield Earlier today I got a text from some email address mentioning my Apple account. I just marked it as spam, deleted it, and went on with my day.
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@DavidGoldfield I'd better press Ctrl+Insert+F7 with JAWS, but yeah, you're right.
@menelion Oh, wow, I didn't know about that hotkey. Thank you for letting me know.
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@DavidGoldfield Earlier today I got a text from some email address mentioning my Apple account. I just marked it as spam, deleted it, and went on with my day.
@NightDrake Yep, it's likely not just spam but a scam.
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@menelion Oh, wow, I didn't know about that hotkey. Thank you for letting me know.
@DavidGoldfield It also works on the web, and it puts the URL in the virtual viewer if pressed twice quickly.
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@DavidGoldfield It also works on the web, and it puts the URL in the virtual viewer if pressed twice quickly.
@menelion Yes, it's identical to the insert+k hotkey in NVDA. I just never knew JAWS had it. I've just used insert+f1 which places the URL at the top line. I think I'll add insert+K to the ctrl+insert+f7 hotkey. It also doesn't speak its function in keyboard help, which Vispero should fix.
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