@buherator @raptor I completely get that URLs are technobabble to many.
But giving out your credit card info to anyone who asks? Look, you can't fix stupid. You're just going to get scammed if you can't think critically about who you give money to and why.
- “Check the domain” doesn’t help if you have no information about what domains are “normal”
Damn right. I rememberd doing some phishing training from Google, and they asked if some email sample is legit, and demonstrated its legitimacy by pointing out that it uses legit DropBox domains.
That’s where I thought “but no one here (DropBox isn’t accessible in China) uses DropBox at all! How are they going to learn if this is legit?!” 🫠
@buherator Is a good defense against this to check the URL string for more "standard" characters? I've heard of attacks where the malicious domain is made to look similar to the legitimate domain. I presume these characters are not the more "normal" ascii characters one sees.
@buherator I understand now, you definitely spelled it out clear in the OP. That's unfortunate.
Web of Trust issue? Should we be engaging in PGP practices where we verify signed links by reputable identities? The government(s) or more "reputable" private bodies should manage these web of trusts?