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Beware! Cybercriminals Now Send Coronavirus Phishing Emails

With the outbreak of coronavirus recently, many organizations have been sending emails on safeguarding and preventive measures. Even if you are the type that does not like reading your emails, it might be different this time. 

Sadly cybercriminals have seen this an opportunity to launch an attack on their targets. There have been many phishing emails and Sophos Security Team was able to identify one recently. The criminals had used the World Health Organization logo in the email. If you are not careful you would certainly think that such an email is from WHO. 

Having discovered this, Sophos Security Team shared security tips regarding coronavirus phishing email. 

  1. Never let yourself feel pressured into clicking a link in an email. Most importantly, don’t act on the advice you didn’t ask for and weren’t expecting. If you are genuinely seeking advice about the coronavirus, do your own research and make your own choice about where to look
  2. Don’t be taken in by the sender’s name. This scam says it’s from “World Health Organization”, but the sender can put any name they like in the From: field
  3. Look out for spelling and grammatical errors. Not all crooks make mistakes, but many do. Take the extra time to review messages for telltale signs that they’re fraudulent – it’s bad enough to get scammed at all without realizing afterwards that you could have spotted the fraud up front
  4. Check the URL before you type it in or click a link. If the website you’re being sent to doesn’t look right, stay clear. Do your own research and make your own choice about where to look
  5. Never enter data that a website shouldn’t be asking for. There is no reason for a health awareness web page to ask for your email address, let alone your password. If in doubt, don’t give it out
  6. If you realise you just revealed your password to imposters, change it as soon as you can. The crooks who run phishing sites typically try out stolen passwords immediately (this process can often be done automatically), so the sooner you react, the more likely you will beat them to it
  7. Never use the same password on more than one site. Once crooks have a password, they will usually try it on every website where you might have an account, to see if they can get lucky
  8. Turn on two-factor authentication (2FA) if you can. Those six-digit codes that you receive on your phone or generate via an app are a minor inconvenience to you, but are usually a huge barrier for the crooks, because just knowing your password alone is not enough
  9. Educate your users. Products like Sophos Phish Threat can demonstrate the sort of tricks that phishers use, but in safety so that if anyone does fall for it, no real harm is done.
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