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Deliveroo sent $25 coupon code to count? 6 major phishing scams Q&A teach you how to protect yourself|Technology plaything

2020-10-06T23:17:44.078Z


[Deliveroo $25 discount on Oolong] Recently, many people in Hong Kong have received an "apology" email from Deliveroo, a food delivery platform. The content is that the company apologizes for the delay in delivery, but the email is received


Practical teaching

Written by: Cai Haoteng

2020-10-07 07:00

Last update date: 2020-10-07 07:00

[Deliveroo $25 discount on Oolong] Recently, many people in Hong Kong have received an "apology" email from Deliveroo, a food delivery platform. The content is that the company apologizes for the delay in delivery, but the user who received the email did not Called Deliveroo.

There are reports of incidents involving Deliveroo's system being hacked, and some even claim that the email is a "phishing" scam sent by criminals.

In fact, what is "phishing" fraud?

Is it really that easy to be recruited?

The following is an in-depth analysis with you.

Deliveroo's $25 discount email shows an oolong event

A few days ago, many users who have registered for Deliveroo received an apology email invariably in their emails. The text stated that due to the delivery delay, the user was given a discount code of $25 as compensation; but the user who received the email did not call Meal, on the other hand, at the end of the email, only a space is seen without the coupon code.

Did not order a meal but received an apology email, no wonder netizens are afraid of their email being hacked (Picture Deliveroo)

After a full afternoon of lively discussions on the Internet, Deliveroo finally sent another apology email that night to apologize for the earlier human error, and this time finally attached a $25 discount code, everyone has a share and everyone is happy. .

Phishing scam?

6 Q&As to avoid "poisoning"

Although the Deliveroo farce this time has ended perfectly, the discussion in the middle is very valuable.

After Deliveroo sent out mass emails by mistake, many voices on the Internet pointed out that this email was a virus or "phishing" email sent out after someone invaded the Deliveroo system, asking people not to open it to prevent poisoning.

It is of course a good thing to be vigilant, but after understanding what a "phishing" scam is, it is actually not as scary as you think. The following 6 questions will help you understand more quickly what is a "phishing" scam and avoid losses👇👇👇

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Additional screening in the same scene: "Hansawa Naoki" teaches you 2 tips to prevent iPhone privacy leakage

The scene in the new episode of "Naoki Hansawa" using AirDrop to send iPhone photos has made Japanese viewers concerned about the risk of privacy leakage in this feature.

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Source: hk1

All news articles on 2020-10-06

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