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  3. the infosec people at my work are rioting because the Distant Corporate Overlord sent an email that scores 10/10 on the phishing scale (“We want to give you a present to thank you for all your hard work!

the infosec people at my work are rioting because the Distant Corporate Overlord sent an email that scores 10/10 on the phishing scale (“We want to give you a present to thank you for all your hard work!

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  • 0xabad1dea@infosec.exchange0 0xabad1dea@infosec.exchange

    the infosec people at my work are rioting because the Distant Corporate Overlord sent an email that scores 10/10 on the phishing scale (“We want to give you a present to thank you for all your hard work! [Click here] to claim your gift!”)

    bremner@mathstodon.xyzB This user is from outside of this forum
    bremner@mathstodon.xyzB This user is from outside of this forum
    bremner@mathstodon.xyz
    wrote last edited by
    #42

    @0xabad1dea One of my petty pleasures is marking all of the emails from our infosec contractor as phishing attempts. They start with things like "You have been assigned" and I'm like, I don't work for you, red flag, red flag! Also they have a history of "fake phishing" people in order to chide them, so they are literally known bad actors. Welp, that's gonna be my story when they finally track down my boss and complain that I've been ignoring them for 6 years.

    0xabad1dea@infosec.exchange0 1 Reply Last reply
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    • bremner@mathstodon.xyzB bremner@mathstodon.xyz

      @0xabad1dea One of my petty pleasures is marking all of the emails from our infosec contractor as phishing attempts. They start with things like "You have been assigned" and I'm like, I don't work for you, red flag, red flag! Also they have a history of "fake phishing" people in order to chide them, so they are literally known bad actors. Welp, that's gonna be my story when they finally track down my boss and complain that I've been ignoring them for 6 years.

      0xabad1dea@infosec.exchange0 This user is from outside of this forum
      0xabad1dea@infosec.exchange0 This user is from outside of this forum
      0xabad1dea@infosec.exchange
      wrote last edited by
      #43

      @bremner I have in fact said to my coworkers "Emails from the corporate overlord aren't real until my manager asks why I haven't responded yet"

      [to be clear, we were a small company that was acquired by a much bigger company in another country]

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      • 0xabad1dea@infosec.exchange0 0xabad1dea@infosec.exchange

        the infosec people at my work are rioting because the Distant Corporate Overlord sent an email that scores 10/10 on the phishing scale (“We want to give you a present to thank you for all your hard work! [Click here] to claim your gift!”)

        economistatwork@sciences.socialE This user is from outside of this forum
        economistatwork@sciences.socialE This user is from outside of this forum
        economistatwork@sciences.social
        wrote last edited by
        #44

        @0xabad1dea My bank did something like this, even asking me to log in to my account using the button in the email. Customer support didn't see the problem as they "could confirm" the email in my inbox was real. More or less wrote their head lawyer that I thought they were complicit in identity theft. Don't think I ever got a reply, but their policy changed after that.

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        • 0xabad1dea@infosec.exchange0 0xabad1dea@infosec.exchange

          the infosec people at my work are rioting because the Distant Corporate Overlord sent an email that scores 10/10 on the phishing scale (“We want to give you a present to thank you for all your hard work! [Click here] to claim your gift!”)

          martouf@piaille.frM This user is from outside of this forum
          martouf@piaille.frM This user is from outside of this forum
          martouf@piaille.fr
          wrote last edited by
          #45

          @0xabad1dea remind me, when i changed my contract, the hr ask some administratives pieces which i give to her
          Some time later, i receive an email at my personnal email adress from someone i do not know, asking the same pieces
          In my head, it was phishing, but no, the hr Just not send the pieces to him (i learn that later) ><

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          • mo@mastodon.mlM mo@mastodon.ml

            @fishidwardrobe that's actually a good idea lol
            if you don't click on suspicious links, you probably don't need phishing training

            @0xabad1dea

            fishidwardrobe@mastodon.me.ukF This user is from outside of this forum
            fishidwardrobe@mastodon.me.ukF This user is from outside of this forum
            fishidwardrobe@mastodon.me.uk
            wrote last edited by
            #46

            @mo @0xabad1dea true, but we were all told (eventually) that we had to click on the suspicious link, which is kind of the opposite

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            • 0xabad1dea@infosec.exchange0 0xabad1dea@infosec.exchange

              phishing training really doesn’t spend enough time on “how to structure your mass corporate communications in such a way that your employees won’t conclude that you communicate exactly like scammers and still expect a reply so they’d better assume scammy emails are legitimate”

              thoreau@mas.toT This user is from outside of this forum
              thoreau@mas.toT This user is from outside of this forum
              thoreau@mas.to
              wrote last edited by
              #47

              @0xabad1dea I had two different employees get scammed out of $500 because they thought I emergency emailed them in the middle of a meeting that I needed $500 in gift cards from Walmart and to just send me the numbers off the cards in email-not sending to my actual email of course.
              I was APPALLED any employee thought I would ask them for money. I mean, I would not even ask you for a quarter to get a bottle of water from a vending machine. I had to announce at a meeting I will never ask for $$

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              • 0xabad1dea@infosec.exchange0 0xabad1dea@infosec.exchange

                phishing training really doesn’t spend enough time on “how to structure your mass corporate communications in such a way that your employees won’t conclude that you communicate exactly like scammers and still expect a reply so they’d better assume scammy emails are legitimate”

                ashteranic@hachyderm.ioA This user is from outside of this forum
                ashteranic@hachyderm.ioA This user is from outside of this forum
                ashteranic@hachyderm.io
                wrote last edited by
                #48

                @0xabad1dea when I started at my current employer, I discovered they’ve outsourced parts of their onboarding process to a third party. Many of the emails I got from the third party resembled phishing attempts, such that I marked several as phishing tests.

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                • david_chisnall@infosec.exchangeD david_chisnall@infosec.exchange

                  @0xabad1dea Microsoft put a big blue banner on all the broadcast-internal emails.

                  I was in a meeting of the D&I Council where someone said they'd sent an email about an event and was surprised I didn't know about it. I eventually found the email: it had the same blue banner.

                  That was when I learned that I had been trained to ignore any email that started with the blue banner. Asking around, I was not the only one. A lot of the internal communication problems had the root cause that there was so much pointless broadcast email that everyone ignored them and missed the important ones.

                  Someone did an internal thing for a hackathon as an Outlook plugin that would estimate the reading time for emails, interrogate the employee database to find the levels, multiply by the average salary for that level scaled to the reading time, and then give you an estimate of how much an email was costing the company if the recipients read it. It never shipped because management didn't like being reminded that they were burning tens of thousands of dollars with their emails.

                  jackeric@beige.partyJ This user is from outside of this forum
                  jackeric@beige.partyJ This user is from outside of this forum
                  jackeric@beige.party
                  wrote last edited by
                  #49

                  @david_chisnall @0xabad1dea I just set up an Outlook rule (rather, a battery of rules) to funnel emails not addresses to me individually and from comms@initech.example etc into a subfolder called "Corporate" I only look at every couple of days.

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                  • mo@mastodon.mlM mo@mastodon.ml

                    @fishidwardrobe that's actually a good idea lol
                    if you don't click on suspicious links, you probably don't need phishing training

                    @0xabad1dea

                    terrybtwo@ohai.socialT This user is from outside of this forum
                    terrybtwo@ohai.socialT This user is from outside of this forum
                    terrybtwo@ohai.social
                    wrote last edited by
                    #50

                    @mo @fishidwardrobe @0xabad1dea At least not that level. Move directly to Advanced class.

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                    • 0xabad1dea@infosec.exchange0 0xabad1dea@infosec.exchange

                      the infosec people at my work are rioting because the Distant Corporate Overlord sent an email that scores 10/10 on the phishing scale (“We want to give you a present to thank you for all your hard work! [Click here] to claim your gift!”)

                      F This user is from outside of this forum
                      F This user is from outside of this forum
                      failedlyndonlarouchite@mas.to
                      wrote last edited by
                      #51

                      @0xabad1dea

                      can't be worse then that recent thing in Korea where the ad campaign seemed to praise a brutal crackdown by the gov't that killed students

                      thank god for it isn't as bad as it can be ?
                      I guess
                      🙂

                      1 Reply Last reply
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                      • 0xabad1dea@infosec.exchange0 0xabad1dea@infosec.exchange

                        the infosec people at my work are rioting because the Distant Corporate Overlord sent an email that scores 10/10 on the phishing scale (“We want to give you a present to thank you for all your hard work! [Click here] to claim your gift!”)

                        crankylinuxuser@infosec.exchangeC This user is from outside of this forum
                        crankylinuxuser@infosec.exchangeC This user is from outside of this forum
                        crankylinuxuser@infosec.exchange
                        wrote last edited by
                        #52

                        @0xabad1dea

                        The real scary email isnt some dumb phishing. The scary is straight forward.

                        "We are a #ransomware operator. We would like for you to run this script on your work machine. If you do, we'll pay you $1000 in your choice of crypto. If they pay the ransom, we pay you 10%."

                        That weaponizes ransomware so that everybody is a potential #insiderthreat. And given these days with so much job abuse due to terrible conditions, sending a few of these emails are sure to hit someone disgruntled enough to say fuckit.

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