On Mar 19, 11:47=A0am, Frank Bures <f...@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote:
> kujebak wrote:
> > Cool online game:
>
> >http://cups.cs.cmu.edu/antiphi****ng_phil/quiz/index.html
>
> All these games are crap. =A0If I do not have an access to full headers
of=
> the phi****ng E-mail any analysis is reduced to sheer guessing. =A0I
wonder=
if
> authors of such games are not actually in cahoots with phishers as not a
> single one explains the correct rules how to distinguish phi****ng
attempts=
..
> =A0 They are simple:
> 1.
> Read the headers
> 2.
> Use ARIN.
>
> Cheers
> Frank
Frank, does it really matter where the e-mail comes
from? One could spend hours trying to figure out true
origin of the junk one finds in the inbox these days,
often to no avail. All that matters is the embedded link
itself. I don't know about Gnome, and any of the other
Linux GUIs you might be favoring, but Windows makes
that very easy - right click on the link to bring up the
properties, then look for all the suspicious clues. Of
course it never makes sense to open any confidential
web site from a link in an e-mail. Any e-mail. That is
a rule *numero uno* :-)
>
> --
>
> <f...@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>


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