Rickrolling didn’t teach us that, 2g1c made us cautious of clicking random links
Goatse and tub girl. And I was a whole ass adult who really needed to learn.
Between 2g1c, goatse, and lemon party, I learned to always triple check every link I even think of clicking on.
A girl In had a crush on sent me the AlbinoBlackSheep “you are an idiot” site that caused a bunch of pop ups. Then she kept sending me links and funny videos and I got all indignant and annoyed because I thought all AlbinoBlackSheep links would be the “you are an idiot” thing.
Upon further review 20 years later she may have been flirting with me.
Anyway that’s why I clicked the scam phishing link, boss.
XcQ it’s staying blue.
Say, isn’t there an xkcd about that? https://xkcd.com/2633/?
It’s about Astronomer Hotlines. But there actual xkcds that at least mention rickrolling, why not use one of them?
Nope. I love that song.
Edit: Know what? I’m going to listen to it right now!
It’s a catchy song. Here’s an acapella cover by Home Free:
I just realized that I’m unable to remember the melody rn. I’ve heard the song a thousand times…
KnowBe4, a popular phishing simulation tool, actually has a built-in rickrolling template.
But are entirely defeated if you make a rule in outlooks saying trash any email that contains knowb4 in the header.
Not only do you pass all phishing tests, but you also don’t get spammed by them when renewal comes around.
Phishme is the same. Add a rull saying trash as my email containing phishme.com in the header.
The emails aren’t from KnowBe4. They are from your HR or CEO or IT department. The links themselves are obvious on the hover though.
You seem to miss where I said header not from field.
The emails originate from knowb4 or phishme servers and customers whitelist those servers from anti spam/phishing/url inspection to minimise the false positives.
The knowb4 and phishme have their names in as part of the email ehlo exchange and are written into the header for tracking.