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on 10-01-2025 09:46 PM
I am referring to an article on this subject at,
and to the the link within that, ' recent examples of phishing emails we've stopped'.
Those examples shown are not very good examples and maybe disingenuous.
These are the senders shown of the 10 emails shown:
Phishing email 1 From: Help Centre
Phishing email 2 From: New Email
Phishing email 3 From: TalkTalk
Phishing email 4 From: Notify My TalkTalk
Phishing email 5 From: TalkTalk.co.uk
Phishing email 6 From: Mail Settings
Phishing email 7 From: Talk Talk
Phishing email 8 From: RENEWSERVER VIEW
Phishing email 9 From: Service Desk
Phishing email 10: From: TalkTalk
I have never received an email from such a sender without the additional part identifying the sender's true email address between '<' and '>' brackets.
So were the email addresses of the senders omitted by the article's TalkTalk author, or do such emails truly exist?
Bill
on 24-01-2025 01:58 PM
Hi Bill, I'm not sure of your real motive in trying to obtain mails that are potentially harmful when all are trying to avoid them. There is no chance of us providing the full mail and address to any outside the business as this would give them the tools to spam and scam our customers. You're asking for information we won't provide. Please desist. If you have a problem and need help we're all here to help.
Ady
Please log in to My Account if you need to view or pay your bill, manage boosts and track your usage. From My Account you can also check your connection and test your line for any issues in the Service Centre.
on 23-01-2025 10:56 PM
@Billx wrote:
I have never received an email from such a sender without the additional part identifying the sender's true email address between '<' and '>' brackets.
HTML, surely? And if you would like to see "the original pictures" I suggest you apply for a job with the TalkTalk teams responsible for web pages and security.
This is beyond frivolous now, please have a read again of the community guidelines before posting again. Topic locked.
on 23-01-2025 10:38 PM
No, I never mentioned HTML. What is this talk about HTML?
I already said they are pictures, but I also said they look like photoshopped pictures.
I would like to see the original pictures.
on 23-01-2025 08:58 PM
They are pictures in an online article, honestly, what is your point? Do you think full HTML breakdown details of the entire content would make it easier for people to heed the warning?
on 23-01-2025 08:52 PM
They look like they are examples which have been photoshopped, before they were included in the article.
on 23-01-2025 08:30 PM
They are EXAMPLES, what is it about that word that you don't understand?
23-01-2025 08:22 PM - edited 23-01-2025 08:25 PM
Thanks @Ady-TalkTalk
But did you mean "the email team already HAS examples of all the current Phishing mails."
If so, that's well and good.
What I meant is that I don't have sufficiently enough examples of Phishing mails.
Therefore, I looked at https://community.talktalk.co.uk/t5/Articles/Phishing-emails-amp-everything-you-need-to-know/ta-p/30...
As I stated above:
"All these example phishing emails have been opened.
They all come with the 'friendly name' of the sender at the 'From:' field, but without being followed by the email address of the sender, between the '<' and the '>'."
Would all these 10 example phishing emails have been photoshopped, and the real email addresses of the senders REMOVED by the article writer? Or are these 10 example phishing emails, the original screenshots of the 10 emails, none of them displaying an email address?
Please, @Ady-TalkTalk, give me a true answer.
Bill
on 15-01-2025 08:33 AM
Thanks Billx, the email team already examples of all the current Phishing mails.
Ady
Please log in to My Account if you need to view or pay your bill, manage boosts and track your usage. From My Account you can also check your connection and test your line for any issues in the Service Centre.
14-01-2025 03:24 PM - edited 14-01-2025 03:51 PM
This is a copy of the first 2 phishing email examples from the list of 10.
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In the 'From:' field, which is the most important field in regard to phishing, there is what is called a 'friendly name' only, but there is zero email address, to know where it came from. So this is beyond phishing, as there is no email address, and these 10 emails can and must immediately be be put in the bin. So what is all the fuss about? Why present these as top examples of phishing emails?
If there were really email addresses on these example emails, but were deleted by the article writer, then that is bad, because I want to know what form those sender's email addresses took.
So, would there have been an email address in each of these emails (and was then deleted by the article writer), or are these the original copies of the 10 emails?
EDIT: Alternatively, is it possible to display an email, without the email containing the sender's email address?
Bill
on 13-01-2025 02:55 PM
Hi Bill, I suspect this is intended to be a guide not necessarily comprehensive list.
Ady
Please log in to My Account if you need to view or pay your bill, manage boosts and track your usage. From My Account you can also check your connection and test your line for any issues in the Service Centre.
on 12-01-2025 02:45 PM
All these example phishing emails have been opened.
They all come with the 'friendly name' of the sender at the 'From:' field, but without being followed by the email address of the sender, between '<' and '>'.
?
Just rephrasing it a bit.
Bill