Annotated phishing examples
The Phishing category in this site’s main blog roll contains many recent examples of phishing scams seen at UD. Some additional annotated phishing messages are displayed below. If you receive a message like any of these, delete it immediately.

This message looks like it comes from a UD email address, but note that the link you are asked to click is NOT a UD Web address. A UD address will always contain udel.edu (note the spelling and punctuation). In this example, the address contains udeledu.net, not udel.edu.

This message claims it is not spam, but note the tell-tale signs of a phishing scam. No reputable organization will ever send you email asking you to provide private information via email.

This one is easy to spot as a phishing scam: it does not come from a udel.edu email address, it contains typos, it contains grammatical errors and “non-fluent” English, it refers to the UD community as customers, and it asks for too much information. No reputable organization will ever send you email asking you to provide private information via email.