On 4/11/2019 12:10 AM, Dr Ajay Data wrote:
Some Interesting things to note:( ❤ - xn--qei and ♥ - xn--g6h )
I am testing with Two working Valid Email Address with heart shape..
❤@data.in and ♥@data.in
When I receive email from the above ID`s, In mobile devices these above hearts are shown in different red shades.However If I send email to Gmail / Outlook, they consider this as Spam. Not only spam, Gmail displays the following warning. -
This message seems dangerous
I tend to agree with these mail providers.
Emoji have no place is security relevant contexts because their rendering is far from standardized and unless magnified, they can be hard to recognize. Also, users have no good idea whether related shapes might exist or not, so any deviation would be attributed to non-standard rendering and most likely accepted.
Finally, many emoji involve sequences that may be displayed by some fall-back means on devices that do not happen to support them. This makes emoji similar to complex scripts, but that danger is underappreciated by many people because emoji have an emotional appeal and appear accessible because the are cute.
They are dangerous in identifiers.
The sender’s email address uses abnormal characters, which might be used to spoof real addresses. Avoid clicking links, downloading attachments, or replying to this message.
Probably, we need to discuss this too and have our views around it.Dr. Ajay Data
Founder & CEO
[XGENFOOTER]
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Do not Remove:
[HID]20190411124031186[-HID]![]()
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