When a deal arrives by email, check the sender domain carefully. Scammers rely on tiny misspellings. #EmailSafety #Scams
Latest posts tagged with #EmailSafety on Bluesky
When a deal arrives by email, check the sender domain carefully. Scammers rely on tiny misspellings. #EmailSafety #Scams
Email safety check: hover to see the real sender domain and look for subtle misspellings. Many “order problem” emails copy brand logos but not domains. #EmailSafety #Phishing
When an email says your order is “on hold,” look at the sender domain carefully and don’t open attachments. Log in to your retailer account directly to check status. #EmailSafety
filewalla.ca/blog
#cybersecurity #securefilesharing #emailsafety
If you hesitate while sending an email... Stop! Don't send it
filewalla.ca
#cybersecurity #securefilesharing #emailsafety
If an email receipt surprises you, don’t click cancel links. Log into the store using your own bookmark and check orders there. #EmailSafety
Email receipt safety: check the sender domain and the order details before opening attachments. Real receipts rarely need you to download a file to “view invoice.” #EmailSafety
Watch for emails that create urgency about order cancellations or refunds. Check the sender domain carefully and navigate to your account directly instead of replying. #EmailSafety #ScamPrevention
If an email claims your order was canceled, don’t use the buttons inside it. Go to your account by typing the store name yourself and verify the status. #EmailSafety
Email safety: hover over the sender and links (or long-press on mobile) to see the real domain. Misspellings and odd subdomains are common in scam receipts. #EmailSafety
Treat unexpected “order confirmation” emails as a prompt to check your account directly, not to call a number in the email. #EmailSafety
Email safety rule: shipping notices should match an order you actually placed. If the message creates panic, open a new browser window and check your account manually. #EmailSafety #OnlineShopping
Email safety for shipping notices: hover to preview the sender domain and look for mismatched names. A legit carrier email usually doesn’t demand payment to “release” a package. #EmailSafety
Treat “order confirmation” emails as untrusted until you verify the sender domain and your actual account order history. Fake receipts try to trigger panic-calls. #EmailSafety
Email receipts can be spoofed. If a “receipt” looks odd, don’t click anything inside it—log in to your account from your own bookmark or app to verify. #EmailSafety
Email receipts you didn’t expect: don’t use the email’s buttons to “cancel.” Instead, go to your retailer account and payment app to verify whether anything actually happened. #EmailSafety #Fraud
Email “invoice attached” scams spike around sale seasons. If you didn’t buy it, don’t open attachments; check your account by typing the site yourself. #EmailSafety
Email safety habit: hover over the sender details and look for mismatched domains or weird reply-to addresses. Legit receipts usually match your order history. #EmailSafety
Look at the email sender carefully when you get an order “confirmation” you didn’t expect. If you didn’t buy it, don’t click—go straight to your account to check. #EmailSafety #ScamPrevention
If an email says your account is locked or payment failed, pause and check the sender details and your order history directly. Urgency is often the trick. #ScamPrevention #EmailSafety
Email “invoice attached” scams spike during sale seasons. If you didn’t order, don’t open attachments. Check your account directly and report the email. #EmailSafety
When an email says “problem with your order,” check the sender domain carefully and avoid attachments. If you’re unsure, go to your account by typing the site name yourself. #EmailSafety
When a sale email looks real, verify the sender domain carefully; scammers often use subtle misspellings or extra words. #EmailSafety #ScamAwareness
When an order confirmation email feels off, check the sender domain carefully and compare it to past real receipts. If unsure, don’t open attachments—log into your account separately. #EmailSafety
Email receipts can be weaponized. Don’t open attachments labeled “invoice” unless you expected them; use your account order history to confirm the purchase first. #EmailSafety #OnlineShopping
Order confirmation emails: double-check the “from” address and the domain spelling. Scammers use lookalikes to push you to “fix” payment. #EmailSafety
Email safety check: real order emails usually include non-clickable details (order number, items, ship address). If it’s all buttons and urgency, slow down. #EmailSafety
When an email says “payment failed” or “confirm your order,” check the sender domain carefully and avoid attached invoices. Legit receipts rarely need you to log in urgently. #EmailSafety
Emails that push urgency can be real or fake. Safer habit: manually type the site address or use your saved bookmark, then check orders from your account page #EmailSafety
Emails with “order confirmation” you didn’t make are usually bait. Don’t click cancel buttons inside the email—log into the retailer account directly to check. #EmailSafety