citrix.eservce.co.uk Open in urlscan Pro
99.81.158.1  Malicious Activity! Public Scan

Submitted URL: http://citrix.eservce.co.uk/0aed382a52d57668?l
Effective URL: http://citrix.eservce.co.uk/load_training?guid=1eed382882d576de&correlation_id=24f4af83-25c5-4eb4-b4f7-0517de7755dc
Submission: On February 24 via manual from NL — Scanned from NL

Form analysis 1 forms found in the DOM

POST http://citrix.eservce.co.uk/training/acceptance?correlation_id=24f4af83-25c5-4eb4-b4f7-0517de7755dc

<form action="http://citrix.eservce.co.uk/training/acceptance?correlation_id=24f4af83-25c5-4eb4-b4f7-0517de7755dc" id="training-form" method="post">
  <div style="text-align: center; margin-top: 20px;"><input class="myButton" data-text="acknowledge" type="submit" value="Got it! Thanks!"></div>
</form>

Text Content

Relax!
 

 



This was a training exercise to teach you how to identify Phishing emails
sent to you from the Security & Risk Awareness Team Rabobank

Had this e-mail been from a real hacker, you would've been phished.
Please scroll down to find out how to avoid this in the future.


 
The hacker tricked you into clicking the malicious link or attachment and maybe
even into entering your credentials.

Here are some things to watch out for:  

Always verify the sender of the e-mail and check if the senders e-mail address
is familiar to you. 
Hover over the link to see the URL destination. Does it match up with a
legitimate site?
Always check the tone of the email. When an email triggers an emotional response
that gets you to act fast or it trickers your curriousity, it could be a
potential scam.
Always check for grammatical and spelling errors in the e-mail, URL and senders
address. Most legitimate sites do not have multiple typos.
If you receive a suspicious e-mail always report the e-mail as Phishing with the
'report button' in outlook and choose 'Report to Microsoft'.





Please do not share your experience with colleagues, so they can learn too.
 
Click to acknowledge and close