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l account. One example of a phishing attack on our clients was related to a message about suspending an Internet domain and encouraging them to make a payment. The phishing message looked like this: a phishing message impersonating home.Pl click to enlarge the photo with a sample email message. The email requesting payment for the domain also had a link directing the user to an external fake website resembling a payment gateway. In January this year, home.Pl customers could receive information about the regular deactivation of unused email accounts.
The attacker asked you to click the "activation" button by entering your email account details on a fake website. email phishing targeting home.Pl customers another example of a message phishing for login details to email accounts in March: phishing home.Pl - email example Mobile App Development Service of phishing from March in which the target of the attack was home.Pl users and cybercriminals wanted to obtain data regarding .Payment card:phishing email Below is an example of what a sample phishing message to the home.Pl mail panel on March looked like. After obtaining the data, the attacker sent a message about an incorrect password.
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How to check whether an email message is real and to avoid extorting data and money during phishing attacks, follow a few rules that will increase your security: pay attention to the content of the message - phishing messages most often contain grammatical and linguistic errors resulting from translation from another language into Polish. Check the sender of an email by reading the header. The header contains full information about the sender's address. You can learn how to check such a header in our article "how to check message headers in home.pl e-mail". Remember that you can also check the message header in any e-mail program, i.e. Mozilla Thunderbird or Outlook (in this case, select the e-mail message.
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