Beware of Phishing Scams at ÃÛÌÒÓ°Ïñ

Did you know shows that the research/education sector is the most targeted by cyberattacks? Yup. So recognizing and reporting phishing emails is a shared responsibility at ÃÛÌÒÓ°Ïñ.

Image
Elbee shark holding a mobile device. image says "don't get hooked. stay cyber secure like Elbee."

Spot It

Learn from some of the most common and successful phishing emails that have recently targeted ÃÛÌÒÓ°Ïñ employees and students:

  • Job Opportunities - These emails quite often come from compromised ÃÛÌÒÓ°Ïñ accounts and lure recipients with unsolicited job opportunities that often sound too good to be true.  They provide basic job information and easy qualifications and direct you to email someone at a non-ÃÛÌÒÓ°Ïñ email address for more details.  These scams have been known to lure you into providing personal and sometimes financial information and leading to loss of money. 
    Image
    Example of a real phishing email that advertises a fake job description. The job title is described as a personal assistant with job responsibilities listed. There is a Google Docs URL link to apply.
  • Password/Email Verification - These types of emails ask you to verify, confirm, update, keep your account credentials and provide a link to a fake webpage, often imitating a Microsoft or Google page. These emails are attempting to collect your username and password, giving a hacker instant access to your account for further use and malicious intent. 
    Image
    Example of a real phishing email claiming that there has been a request to terminate user's Office 365 accounts if they are not verified through the short URL link. The phishing post claims to be from the IT Department on campus.
  • Documents Shared with You - Hackers will try to impersonate people at ÃÛÌÒÓ°Ïñ, such as someone in the HR department, the Technology Help Desk, or even a colleague, or another ÃÛÌÒÓ°Ïñ student.  These types of phishing emails might ask you to click on a link to access a document with enticing but fake subject matter.  These emails are usually attempting to steal your username and password. 
    Image
    Example of a real phishing email claiming to be President Conoley attaching a Word file that needs to be signed and reviewed.
  • Quick Tasks - These scams often appear to come from a management-level colleague but from a non-ÃÛÌÒÓ°Ïñ email account, like Gmail, and asking if you’re available for a quick favor. These often develop into attempts to get you to make purchases of gift cards.
Image
Example of a real phishing email asking for a discrete request to be made by responding to the email. This is claiming to be a request from University faculty.

Want to Learn from More Real Examples?

  • Visit our for real examples and tips (login required).
  • See recent, real phishing examples with tips for avoiding these scams by visiting our article . 
  • View the ongoing list of phishing emails reported to Division of IT on our site.

Report It

  • If you use the Outlook online app for your ÃÛÌÒÓ°Ïñ email, you can to improve our email filtering.
  • If you think you may have encountered a phishing email, you can forward it to alert@csulb.edu. We can help you determine if it’s a phishing email. Whatever you do, do not click on any links, reply to the email, or send it to anyone else!

Get the Best Protection for Your ÃÛÌÒÓ°Ïñ Account

Know about our Multi-Factor Authentication (MFA) Top Tips

As a student or employee, you're required to use MFA at ÃÛÌÒÓ°Ïñ. Ensure you're making the best of it with our tips for the best security.

Image
multi-factor authentication top tips with details listed within the following paragraph
  1. Use for its every day convenience and additional security features. If you're using SMS text or phone calls for MFA, you are more vulnerable to scams.
  2. Only accept second-factor requests with you initiate them.
  3. Setup multiple multi-factor methods to ensure you maintain a backup and can always access campus services. Learn how to .
  4. Use "" for logging into your campus account.

More Fun and Learning Opportunities

Want to test your phishing knowledge?

Check out .

How to Avoid Job Scams + Spot Fake Job Offer Letter

ÃÛÌÒÓ°Ïñ is not affiliated with the creator of this video.