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About
Marist University Day Celebration
Join us in celebrating this historic milestone as we officially become Marist University on Jan. 29. With activities, giveaways, and lots of community spirit, it will be a day to remember!
About
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Academics
Marist University Day Celebration
Join us in celebrating this historic milestone as we officially become Marist University on Jan. 29. With activities, giveaways, and lots of community spirit, it will be a day to remember!
Academics
-
Admission & Financial Aid
Marist University Day Celebration
Join us in celebrating this historic milestone as we officially become Marist University on Jan. 29. With activities, giveaways, and lots of community spirit, it will be a day to remember!
Admission & Financial Aid
-
Student Life
Marist University Day Celebration
Join us in celebrating this historic milestone as we officially become Marist University on Jan. 29. With activities, giveaways, and lots of community spirit, it will be a day to remember!
Student Life
- Athletics
An image of a letter being caught by a fishing pole with the text "Gone Phishing"
Why this looks valid
- The email looks like it is from someone from Marist College, most likely your supervisor, department head, or a campus Senior Leader
- The email may also have an exact replica of the person's email signature
- Frequently the email will address the recipient directly by name
Why this is fraud
- The originating email address is from a gmail account, not a Marist College address
- Pay attention to sentence construction, spelling, and grammar - language mistakes are good indicators of malicious emails
- If the recipient responds to the message, the communication will quickly transfer to text or phone, and the scammer will try to convince the person to purchase a gift card or perpetuate another type of fraudulent financial transaction
Additional notes
- This is a very common scam that is regularly reported to Marist IT - the scam is based on existing trust relationships among the Marist community, and is perpetuated by impersonating a supervisor and emailing everyone in their organization
- This scam can also happen through text message. Always be wary of any communication that leads of with a high sense of urgency
- A phone call to the alleged sender would quickly verify if this is a legitimate email. It only takes a few minutes to pick up the phone!
- Remember to always send suspicious email messages to phishing@marist.edu. Timely reporting helps keep the entire Marist College community safe from cyber criminals!