Stay Safe Online
October 12th, 2009 Filed in: Announcements, Security 3 comments
The following is an important message from Mark Risher, Spam Czar for Yahoo! Mail, worldwide:
Keeping you safe while you’re online is a top priority for us here at Yahoo!. One important part of your online safety is making sure that nobody else can access your Yahoo! Mail account without your permission, and the best way to do that is to make sure you choose a good password and make sure nobody else knows it or can easily guess it.
know it can feel like a pain typing out a more detailed password, but none of us want to make it any easier for the bad guys.
My top advice is to be mindful of any Web page that requests your Yahoo! password. The #1 way people get their passwords stolen is by typing them into lookalike “phishing” web sites, pages that pretend to be Yahoo! or another trusted Web site but actually are run by the bad guys. Scrutinize carefully any page that requests your Yahoo! password. In addition:
- Make sure the Web page address doesn’t have any misspellings or extra words (e.g. http://www.yah000.com, http://www.yahoo-members.com, or http://www.yahoo.BadGuyEnterprises.com) in it. When it doubt, go straight to http://www.yahoo.com.au and log in from there.
- Be vigilant about anything that doesn’t look right on the page, such as typos, outdated content, or broken or missing pictures.
- Best idea: be sure to set up a customized “Sign-In seal” picture — instructions are located here — and never enter your password unless you see that picture on the page.
Here are a few more tips to help keep you safe online:
- Don’t use the same password on multiple sites. Your Yahoo! Mail account is important to you, so it deserves its own password. That way, if the unthinkable happens on another site, at least your Yahoo! mailbox remains secure.
- Never send your password over email. Yahoo! will never request your password from you in an e-mail; if you ever receive such a request, you should treat it as fraud. Do not pass “Go!” Instead immediately click the “Spam” button on that message.
- Protect yourself with a virus scanner. Another way passwords get stolen is from a virus that records your keystrokes. Don’t give the bad guys that option: There are a number of anti-virus companies that offer free versions or trial offers, including (in no particular order and with no specific endorsement implied) http://security.symantec.com , http://usa.kaspersky.com/downloads/free-virus-scanner.php, http://us.mcafee.com/root/downloads.asp?id=freeTrials, and http://www.avast.com/eng/avast_4_home.html.
Unfortunately there is no silver bullet against these criminals and con-men, but hopefully these tips will help us all keep the bad guys at bay.
Mark Risher – Spam Czar, Yahoo! Mail

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3 Comments Add your own
1. Remember: Yahoo!will NEVE&hellip | February 16th, 2010 at 9:25 am
[...] is not the first post we write about online account security and I am sure it won’t be the last one either… Unfortunately, this subject matter keeps [...]
2. Charles Jordaan | March 22nd, 2010 at 11:51 pm
How do I change my password in email?
3. Remember: Yahoo!will NEVE&hellip | May 12th, 2010 at 11:59 pm
[...] is not the first post we’ve written about online account security and I am sure it won’t be the last one either… Unfortunately, this subject matter keeps [...]
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