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Brainstorm Design Blog

How to spot a phishing scam

Posted by Danny Bermant - 04 Jul 2011

Have you been the victim of a Phishing scam? Or do you know anyone who has? Here are some easy ways to spot the scam:

  1. Be suspicious of anyone who sends an email asking you to verify or update your account details by clicking on a link.  E.g. If an email purporting to come from Paypal tells you your account has been suspended, manually type in the address of the Paypal site to check if indeed your site has been suspended. No legitimate organisation will send you an email with a link asking you to login. 
  2. If you do happen to click on the link of a phishing site, there is any easy way to spot that it’s fraudulent. Going back to our example of Paypal. If the sender way from Paypal, the “Top Level Domain” (the bit that shows after the “http://www”) would be http://www.paypal.com. But if it’s a phishing site, this address will be something else. More often than not, it’s an address consisting of a series of numbers. Examples are: 
    http://signin.paypal.com@10.19.32.4/
    http://83.16.123.18/pp/update.htm?=
    And even then, the address really can look like it’s from Paypal, https://www.paypal.com/=cmd_login_access so don’t risk it, open a new window, and manually type in the Paypal address.

Facebook has stopped supporting IE6, maybe it's time you followed their example?

Posted by Danny Bermant - 07 Sep 2010

Facebook have just announced they are going to stop supporting Internet Explorer 6. What about you? Do you intend to continue supporting it?

IE6 may only have 5% of the market, but a lot of those users are concentrated in the business sector where many corporate IT departments will only support IE6. (the same applies for UK Government departments).

And therein lies a dilemma. Stop supporting IE6 and you lose out on potential business customers. Continue to support IE6 and you may be incurring significant web development costs just to make your website accessible to a small percentage of your users. 

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