I wish I could do that, but then that would impact my "scoreboard" on the anti-phishing tool and they would yell at me or send me to remedial "training" too. They really like to see that useless button pressed that just patronizingly tells me "Yes, this was a training exercise".
At the moment in my current corporate email address this the number one source of spam, just all the internal phishing testing emails. It feels like the attempted cure is worse than the disease and I hate getting so much useless trash.
> I wish I could do that, but then that would impact my "scoreboard" on the anti-phishing tool and they would yell at me or send me to remedial "training" too. They really like to see that useless button pressed that just patronizingly tells me "Yes, this was a training exercise".
It's actually even a worse than that for our anti-phishing tool, somehow Outlook's processing triggers the tool to think that I've interacted with the email, but after several rounds of "our tool says you clicked a link" and my reply of "I 100% didn't, let me see some logs", they now seem to ignore notifications of me clicking on phishing test links. So a win for me, I guess?
At the moment in my current corporate email address this the number one source of spam, just all the internal phishing testing emails. It feels like the attempted cure is worse than the disease and I hate getting so much useless trash.