www.refund.postcardfast.com Open in urlscan Pro
18.206.77.13  Public Scan

Submitted URL: http://www.refund.postcardfast.com/707898180ef55a1a?l=15
Effective URL: http://www.refund.postcardfast.com/load_training?guid=0178981acef55a56&correlation_id=d70cfbaa-5c14-4a59-9a1a-7b3a0057c31b
Submission: On April 06 via api from US — Scanned from DE

Form analysis 1 forms found in the DOM

POST http://www.refund.postcardfast.com/training/acceptance?correlation_id=d70cfbaa-5c14-4a59-9a1a-7b3a0057c31b

<form action="http://www.refund.postcardfast.com/training/acceptance?correlation_id=d70cfbaa-5c14-4a59-9a1a-7b3a0057c31b" class="well form-inline wrp" id="training-form" method="POST">
  <div><span style="font-family: arial,helvetica,sans-serif;"><button class="btn" data-text="ack" name="training_ack" style="background-color: red;" type="submit">Acknowledge</button></span></div>
</form>

Text Content

STOP: You've been phished.

Your actions could have put the company's sensitive data and systems at risk. 
 

However, because this is an authorized exercise by the cybersecurity team at
NextEra Energy, you have the chance to learn from your mistake and ensure it
doesn't happen again. Please do not warn your colleagues about this exercise so
they may go through the same learning experience. Though we encourage the
sharing of best practices and phishing tips, employees should never
forward suspicious emails to each other, as this further spreads the reach of
potentially malicious content and puts more people at risk of clicking on a
dangerous link or attachment.

Read through the below teachable moment and click the acknowledge button at the
bottom of the page to complete.

Did you take a moment to think about this email before you clicked?
Increase your situational awareness and take extra caution with any external
emails. Spend a few extra moments to ask yourself questions such as: is this
email relevant to me? Do I recognize the sender? Would I normally receive this
type of email from this sender? Is the sender asking for something that seems
unusual, urgent or breaks company policy? Look for the red flags of a phishing
email such as the external email banner, suspicious links and attachments, a
sense of urgency and a call to action. Use the below illustration of the anatomy
of a phish for reference.



Don't forget to report any suspicious emails you receive to the cybersecurity
team by clicking "Report this Email," "Quick Response" or "Emergency Response"
on the message's external email banner. By reporting phishing emails, you can
help the cybersecurity team defend the company and win prizes up to and
including a free click towards your record with the company-wide phishing
program. For more information about these prizes, as well as more helpful
resources on how to spot and stop phishing attacks, visit eWeb/Phishing.

By clicking below, you agree that you have reviewed the training material.

Acknowledge

This phishing simulation was provided by your employer and may contain logos
from unaffiliated companies. Please only contact your employer regarding this
message. Confidential and Proprietary - Privacy Policy