Think you can spot a hacker's phishing email? Take Google's quiz and find out (GOOG, GOOGL)
- Google and its sister company, Jigsaw, made a quiz that you can use to test your prowess at spotting phishing emails designed to gain access to your personal information.
- The quiz shows you eight fishy email templates to see whether you can tell the legitimate emails from those intended to steal your data.
- The average user receives 16 malicious emails a month, so it's more important than ever to be aware of what to look out for when sorting through your inbox.
Phishing emails aren't always as obvious as Nigerian princes asking for money.
Hackers have advanced in their practices, and it's become a lot harder to tell whether that suspicious-looking email is legit. In fact, more than 75% of organizations surveyed in an annual cybersecurity report from Wombat Security said they had experienced phishing attacks in 2017.
This is why Google and Jigsaw — a security-focused tech incubator owned by Alphabet, Google's parent company — teamed up to create a quiz that measures your ability to determine which emails seem to be phishing attempts. The eight-question quiz takes you through various email examples where you can decide whether the emails are designed to gain access to your passwords and sensitive information.
The examples in the quiz are inspired by real phishing emails, Google says. This includes a phishing attempt in May 2017 from hackers that sent emails with fake Google Doc links.
Here's how the quiz works.
Before getting started, you'll be asked for a name and email to use for the quiz. Don't worry — they can be fake or decoy inputs, since they're only used to create the email templates for the quiz.
The quiz has eight questions, each with a different email setup based on real-life phishing emails. It's up to you to decide whether each email is a phishing attempt or a legitimate message.
It's possible to determine the legitimacy of each email by digging around its contents a bit first. Hovering over any link in the email will bring up the button's URL, which you can use to determine if the email's the real deal.
The email in the quiz isn't real, so clicking on a link in the body won't bring you anywhere. But remember that doing so on a real phishing email would give hackers access to your information.
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