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About
Admitted Student Days
• Saturday, March 28
• Sunday, March 29
• Saturday, April 11Accepted Students: Be sure to register for one of our Admitted Student Days and explore all that Marist has to offer.
About
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Academics
Admitted Student Days
• Saturday, March 28
• Sunday, March 29
• Saturday, April 11Accepted Students: Be sure to register for one of our Admitted Student Days and explore all that Marist has to offer.
Academics
-
Admission & Financial Aid
Admitted Student Days
• Saturday, March 28
• Sunday, March 29
• Saturday, April 11Accepted Students: Be sure to register for one of our Admitted Student Days and explore all that Marist has to offer.
Admission & Financial Aid
-
Student Life
Admitted Student Days
• Saturday, March 28
• Sunday, March 29
• Saturday, April 11Accepted Students: Be sure to register for one of our Admitted Student Days and explore all that Marist has to offer.
Student Life
- Athletics
An image of a letter being caught by a fishing pole with the text "Gone Phishing"
What NOT To Do: Phishing & Secure Your Workstation
What TO Do: Phishing & Secure Your Workstation
Why this looks valid
- The email appears to be from Marist
- The email has branding which makes it look like it is related to Microsoft services
- The website in the email looks the same as a Microsoft login page
Why this is phishing
- The from address is not a marist.edu email
- The orange EXTERNAL EMAIL banner shows that it came from off-campus
- There is no department called the Marist Help Center
- Marist does not use the direct Microsoft login screen
Additional notes
- This is an extremely dangerous phishing attempt. If you clicked on the link and filled in your Marist credentials, please contact the Help Desk immediately at x4357 (HELP) or helpdesk@marist.edu (please note that just clicking on the website is not harmful and poses no risk to your computer or information).
- Spelling and grammatical errors are good indicators of malicious emails.
- Remember: always check the link. You can hover over the link in the email to ensure that it goes to the service referenced in the email. On a mobile device, you can tap and hold the link to preview the page and see the website location.
- Report this message to Microsoft. In Outlook on the Web, click the Junk menu, and select Phishing.
- A little paranoia goes a long way! Be suspicious of any email messages similar to this one.