There was also the time DCCC was providing security advice to campaigns... by sending them attachments.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/outlook/2018/09/04/im-teaching-email-security-democratic-campaigns-its-bad/ …
-
-
Show this thread
-
I also like those "click here to enroll in XYZ" emails from credit cards. Training customers to fall for phishing.
Show this thread -
This Tweet is unavailable.Show this thread
-
It's mind-boggling the stupid things consumer finance companies will do like this, in spite of the fact that at least in the United States, they usually end up having to cover and/or pay for fraud.https://twitter.com/BoenderCarol/status/1037765638675226626 …
Show this thread -
Show this thread
-
Ah, yes, unquestioningly run all the .exe files sent to you by your "CISO"! (Is this like the corporate version of trust-building exercises? Fall backwards into arms of your colleagues or something?)https://twitter.com/advicepig/status/1037780818356260864 …
Show this thread -
Sounds about right! https://twitter.com/djnemec/status/1037799363681116160 …
This Tweet is unavailable.Show this thread -
Also, kudos to
@Chase for labeling the verification codes as “OTP” without any other explanation on the text messages sent probably to millions of customers, all of whom are no doubt fully-versed in infosec acronyms! Here’s your OTP random bank customer. All legit.pic.twitter.com/jc5taz9cIp
Show this thread
End of conversation
New conversation -
-
-
I assumed this *was* a scam!
-
Actually, it was legit. I even kinda knew what it was referring to without them telling me. I just wouldn't talk on the phone on principle.
- Show replies
New conversation -
Loading seems to be taking a while.
Twitter may be over capacity or experiencing a momentary hiccup. Try again or visit Twitter Status for more information.