Thanks, I'll check it out.
On Thu, Jun 8, 2023 at 8:30 AM Greg Troxel <gdt@lexort.com> wrote:
> Dave Sublette <k4to.dave@gmail.com> writes:
>
> > I got an email, allegedly from this list owner saying I had too many
> > bounces and to reconfirm my membership or I would be dropped. It had
> links
> > enclosed that appeared to take me to the registration page. It also
> listed
> > my password in plain text.
> >
> > I am suspicious... I have never received any message like this and I have
> > been a member for several years.
> >
> > I will gladly reconfirm if this is valid, but one cannot be too cautious
> > these days.
>
> I can't speak for the list owner, but mailman definitely does this, both
> sending such messages, and including your super-secret list password in
> plain text. So this is not really a priori very surprising.
>
> You are right to be suspicious of links in incoming mail, and my
> approach is to absorb that you should visit the list page from the
> email, set the email aside *without using any links in it* and then find
> the list page yourself. You can search, or you can go back over the
> messages you have received from the list, which should all have the link
> in the footer. But the big point is not to navigate from received
> emails to any site where you log in or enter information.
>
> The thing to beware of is email that looks like it is a link to the
> right place but is actually a link to someplace else. Reading mail in
> plain text helps, as does looking at the html manually. People can
> insert things that look like (wrong brackets to prevent html
> interpretation):
>
> [a href=http://evil.site]http://lists.contesting.com[/a]
>
> and mail readers will dutifully display the good address but take you to
> the bad one when clicked.
>
> 73 de n1dam
>
>
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