Defending against a phishing e-mail message
I previously made the case that Windows users should use Thunderbird for email. When I got a fraudulent e-mail message on Saturday claiming to come from PayPal, Thunderbird offered two lines of defense.
The first was the big warning that the message might be a scam. Indeed it was.
The body of the message was a pretty standard phishing scam, with the usual typos and the true destination of the link hidden.
Thunderbird's second line of defense was not falling prey to the common practice of using hidden JavaScript code to hide the real destination of a link embedded … Read more