Most of us are Reddit refugees, and probably clicking more random links than we ever did before on websites we’ve never seen before. This whole experience feels like the old internet, but also throws up insane red flags with a modern internet perspective. What are the cybersecurity weaknesses we should all be looking for, and what are the best practices?
Here’s my reason for posting this. As I search for new communities across instances to follow, I sometimes end up clicking a link and I’m no longer logged in. In the corner, that could be a Sign In link or it could be phishing. It’s likely due to me not understanding how to properly navigate this system, but there’s nothing stopping someone from setting up a sight like this as far as I know.
Thoughts?
Thanks for the explainer! Doing some testing cause your example didn’t hyperlink on Memmy
c/tech@pawb.social /c/tech@pawb.social !c/tech@pawb.social !tech@pawb.social test text /c/tech@pawb.social /c/Lemmy@lemmy.ml
Weird. Not sure when your example didn’t link, because it did in my comment ¯\(ツ)/¯
Edit: I’m back on browser. Everything that hyperlinked works properly. It’s a Memmy issue
Okay I learned a few things, though they may be specific to Memmy.
I think #2 is responsible for the Null errors I’ve been getting when text is hyperlinked.Text testing #3 - confirmed, this returns the Null error.
Now without prior text
test - this also didn’t work
test! - using a link beginning with ! Also didn’t work. Hmm.
I love the “show source” button which gives access to how the tests are made.
On computer/browser, the “this also didnt work” test works.