PAGE 5: Wellness, Athletics and Recreation programs expand beyond fitness
PAGE 13: After complaints, e-scooters have uncertain future in Chicago
PAGE 6: ASL interpreters provide accessibility in theatre shows PAGE 11: OPINION: Columbia should provide period products for all Volume 55, Issue 6
October 7, 2019
ColumbiaChronicle.com
» COURTESY JOHN DOE
STUDENT LOSES $2,000 IN COLUMBIA OUTLOOK EMAIL PHISHING SCAM
» MARI DEVEREAUX STAFF REPORTER » COURTESY JOHN DOE
» WESLEY ENRIQUEZ/CHRONICLE
A COLUMBIA STUDENT lost $2,000 in September after falling victim to one of several alleged dog walking job scams circulating among the school’s Outlook accounts, causing Columbia administrators to warn students to be on the lookout. The student—whom the Chronicle will not name for privacy concerns and will be referred to by the pseudonym John Doe—said the interaction started when he received an email from a “colum.edu” account asking if anyone wanted to walk dogs for an aunt, who
was identified as Janette Winston, and was moving from California to Chicago. Looking for a lighter workload and better pay, Doe said he took the job, feeling secure that the offer had come from a fellow Columbia student because the address had a “colum.edu” extension. Kathie Koch, chief information officer at Columbia, said this popular form of phishing attempts to coerce users into clicking on a link sent by an external source, allowing hackers to send a scam email to everyone within the institution’s email system. SEE SCAM, PAGE 3