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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 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.