Spam, Phishing and Malware
Motto:
- Bad news = You cannot be prepared to all attacker’s inventions
- Good news = Being slightly more clever, than the attacker expects you are, is enough.
- Quick and automate reaction makes troubles.
- Do not accept what message suggests, until you are perfectly sure you understand the intentions.
- Do not belive the sender's identity until you really verify it (check sender’s email address closely).
- Better safe, than sorry.
- Be brave! Never try to conceal your possible mistake - take it in possitive way - we all learn from mistakes. We all
- Cowards who awkwardly try to avoid of mistake revealing usualy make things much worse for them and for the rest of the institution.
Bonuses:
Good article about clicking links in emails (phishing etc.)
How and why Thunderbird block remote content
See also “Dealing with malware, spam, suspicious content” in separated CERGE-EI Wiki article (details about security measures applied to incoming emails)
and "Spam fiters at CERGE-EI" (describing chain of email filters for incoming traffic)
Types of attacks, its danger and adequate reaction:
spam
[Classification: POTENTIALY DANGEROUS]
- Unsolicited mail, just offers unneeded or annoying things.
- By links to fraudulent webpages or danger attachments could be transformed to other type.
- Do not open links and attachments, do not reply to it, delete it.
hoax
[Classification: ANNOYING]
- By wiki: A hoax is a falsehood deliberately fabricated to masquerade as the truth.
- You could be abused to help distribute it. Other harmful content could be appended.
- Do not resend it to any other address, delete it.
phishing
[Classification: PRETTY DANGEROUS]
- Asks for confidential and private information, often by using fraudulent webpage, masking the request as an account renew etc. Make time pressure and urgency illusion.
- Never use offered links without its authenticity thorough verification.
- Be very careful and abstemious by inserting your login and password anywhere.
spoofing
[Classification: DANGEROUS]
- The message looks like sent from a trustworthy address, your jobmate, manager, IT crowd, your home institution server etc.
- Verify sender’s email address, not only the free text label presented by some e-mail client.
- Take care of “mistyped” form of address, e.g cerce-ei,cz or enlarged form cerge-ei.cz.xxxxx etc.
malware
[Classification: DANGEROUS]
- The harmful code hidden in an executable attachment or in a document as a macro or on the fraudulent webpage linked from the message.
- Never open documents or pages looking like something very very interesting. There is no chance to take a non-binding look.
ransomware
[Classification: THE MOST DANGEROUS]
- Special malware encrypting every data you can access and asking ransom. The process of encrypting could be long term so backups could be affected too.
- Avoid being infected by malware.
What to do, if you are uncertain about email (possible cyber attack)
- Thing first, check all circumstances, ask in doubt (IT, colleagues, sender,…).
- Do not allow the time presure effect, think twice. postpone the action (back to step 1 eventually
- Only if you are absolutely sure, continue with an action suggested in email (settings review, password change etc.)
- In case of any suspicion at any time, share it with IT (including all details).
- If you think you have compromised your password or account in any way, change the password ASAP and inform IT (compulsory).
In any doubt, do not hesitate to ask helpdesk@cerge-ei.cz. Please prepare complete documentation, timeline, addresses, raw text of message (see wiki - problem reporting)