Today I got an email from management, something along the lines of “you didnt click the link in this email we sent as a required questionnaire about phishing, some people reported it as phishing: a reminder, all emails from IT@company.com are not phishing”
There was no previous email
I checked the message details and it said “THIS IS A PHISHING TEST BY external company”
It was a phishing test disguised as an urgent reminder to answer a phishing questionnaire, replying to a nonexistent email. I can’t wait until Monday when they round up everyone who clicked the link
This is a good one. We get standard phishing tests which make no sense. It is usually a person I don’t know, from a company I haven’t heard of asking me to edit/review a file they share. People who design these tests should know that people do NOT jump into the opportunity of editing/reviewing files or receiving tasks. I imagine real phishing attacks must be smarter than this.
I work for a small-ish but fast-growing municipality, and we’re getting increasingly well-targeted actual attacks. Instead of posing as “The IT department” they’re posing as my boss or the City Manager by name.
This week they even started name-dropping the conference most of the directors were actually attending as an excuse why we wouldn’t be able to reach out and talk to them before the "request$ was due.
Today I got an email from management, something along the lines of “you didnt click the link in this email we sent as a required questionnaire about phishing, some people reported it as phishing: a reminder, all emails from IT@company.com are not phishing”
There was no previous email
I checked the message details and it said “THIS IS A PHISHING TEST BY external company”
It was a phishing test disguised as an urgent reminder to answer a phishing questionnaire, replying to a nonexistent email. I can’t wait until Monday when they round up everyone who clicked the link
This is a good one. We get standard phishing tests which make no sense. It is usually a person I don’t know, from a company I haven’t heard of asking me to edit/review a file they share. People who design these tests should know that people do NOT jump into the opportunity of editing/reviewing files or receiving tasks. I imagine real phishing attacks must be smarter than this.
Not nessecarily. They only need one person to run the file
I work for a small-ish but fast-growing municipality, and we’re getting increasingly well-targeted actual attacks. Instead of posing as “The IT department” they’re posing as my boss or the City Manager by name.
This week they even started name-dropping the conference most of the directors were actually attending as an excuse why we wouldn’t be able to reach out and talk to them before the "request$ was due.
Wow damn that’d trick whole swaths of our org 🤦. Sad how many people we still get with the super obvious “Free $5 on Venmo” phishing tests…
That’s actually pretty smart.
They did something similar at our university, I wonder how many fell for it. They never told us
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