Phishing links: Difference between revisions

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Having a link link like this one in your E-Mail content will most likely get you blocked. It may look harmless, but replace "inboxsys.net" with "www.bankofamerica.com" and you have a classic phishing attempt, whereby the phisher is luring someone to a false banking login from the Bank of America. A spamfilter doesn't know the difference. A spamfilter most likely only concludes, both domains are different and therefore it may be a phising E-Mail.
Having a link link like this one in your E-Mail content will most likely get you blocked. It may look harmless, but replace "inboxsys.net" with "www.bankofamerica.com" and you have a classic phishing attempt, whereby the phisher is luring someone to a false banking login from the Bank of America. A spamfilter doesn't know the difference. A spamfilter most likely only concludes, both domains are different and therefore it may be a phising E-Mail.
=Phishing Links in InboxSys app=
To detect if you have phishing links in your message, [[Sending a message to the seedlist|send a message to your seedlist]] and look in the [[Content check|content]] section of the [[:Category:E-Mail analysis|E-Mail analysis]].

Revision as of 17:13, 31 August 2023

Phishing Links are links that look as if they are trying to impersonate a different domain.Containing phishing like links in your E-Mail content is likely to get you blocked. Here are a few examples:

Standard link

<a href="https://inboxsys.com">this</a>

The link looks like this. In this example:

Standard link with domain in text

Here is another example:

<a href="https://inboxsys.com">inboxsys.com</a>

This link is used to link directly to inboxsys.com. As you can see:

Phishing link

So far, so good. But the next example could lead to immediate blocks:

<a href="https://inboxsys.com">inboxsys.net</a>

The link and the link text are different domains:

Having a link link like this one in your E-Mail content will most likely get you blocked. It may look harmless, but replace "inboxsys.net" with "www.bankofamerica.com" and you have a classic phishing attempt, whereby the phisher is luring someone to a false banking login from the Bank of America. A spamfilter doesn't know the difference. A spamfilter most likely only concludes, both domains are different and therefore it may be a phising E-Mail.

Phishing Links in InboxSys app

To detect if you have phishing links in your message, send a message to your seedlist and look in the content section of the E-Mail analysis.