Keep your EMAIL safe with these tips!
In many ways, your network is only as strong as its weakest
link. Don’t let the weakest link be you. In addition to the tools
administrators use to keep unwanted threats out, user education is key to
keeping your network secure.
Read through these helpful tips to keep yourself safe from
email threat.
- Change
your password often.
- Use
strong passwords. Never use a password that contains “password” or
“letmein”.
- Use
a different password for each of your accounts. If you use the same
password for your bank account as you do for your email account, you
become much more vulnerable to data theft.
- Don’t
open an attachment unless you know who it is from & are expecting it.
- Be
cautious about email messages that instruct you to enable macros before
downloading Word or Excel attachments.
- Use
anti-virus software on your local machine, and make sure it’s kept
up-to-date with the latest virus definitions.
- If
you receive an attachment from someone you don’t know, don’t open it.
Delete it immediately.
- Learn
how to recognize phishing
– Messages that contain threats to shut your account down
– Requests for personal information such as passwords or Social Security numbers
– Words like “Urgent” – false sense of urgency
– Forged email addresses
– Poor writing or bad grammar - Hover
your mouse over links before you click on them to see if the URL looks
legitimate.
- Instead
of clicking on links, open a new browser and manually type in the address.
- Don’t
give your email address to sites you don’t trust.
- Don’t
post your email address to public websites or forums. Spammers often scan
these sites for email addresses.
- Don’t
click the “Unsubscribe” link in a spam email. It would only let the
spammer know your address is legitimate, which could lead to you receiving
more spam.
- Understand
that reputable businesses will never ask for personal information via
email.
- Don’t
send personal information in an email message.
- Don’t
reply to spam. Be aware that if you reply to a spam email, your reply
most-likely will not go back to the original spammer because the FROM
header in the spam message will most-likely be forged.
- Don’t
share passwords.
- Be
sure to log out, especially on public PC’s such as the library.
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