e-mail for many of us has become almost reflexive. It is fast, easy and provide an audit trail of our communication. All good right? Not so fast. The same factors that make e-mail so convenient, also create security vulnerbilities that you need to be aware of. Following is a quick list of some important security tips that apply to all e-mail users, listed by priority and how easy it is to implement (we know everyone likes eays). The last five pointers are best practices that will hopefull avert some of the more common mistakes that can get you in trouble.
#1: Never allow an e-mail client to fully render HTML or XHTML e-mails without careful thought.
At the absolute most, if you have a mail client such as Microsoft Outlook or Mozilla Thunderbird that can render HTML e-mails, you should configure it to render only simplified HTML rather than rich HTML – or “Original HTML,” as some clients label the option. Even better is to configure it to render only plain text. When rendering HTML, you run the risk of identifying yourself as a valid recipient of spam or getting successfully phished by some malicious security cracker or identity thief.
#2: If the privacy of your data is important to you, use a local POP3 or IMAP client to retrieve e-mail.
This means avoiding the use of Web-based e-mail services, such as Gmail, Hotmail, and Yahoo! Mail for e-mail you want to keep private for any reason. Even if your Webmail service provider’s policies seem sufficiently privacy-oriented to you, that doesn’t mean that employees won’t occasionally break the rules. Some providers are accused of selling e-mail addresses to spamming “partners.” Even supposedly security-oriented Webmail services, such as Hushmail, can often be less than diligent in providing security to their users’ e-mail.
#3: Ensure that your e-mail authentication process is encrypted, even if the e-mail itself is not.
The reason for this is simple: You do not want some malicious security cracker listening in on your authentication session with the mail server. Someone who does this can then send e-mails as you, receive your e-mail, and generally cause all kinds of problems for you (including spammers). Check with your ISP’s policies to determine whether authentication is encrypted and even how it is encrypted (so you might be able to determine how trivial it is to crack the encryption scheme used).
#4: Digitally sign your e-mails.
As long as you observe good security practices with e-mail in general, it is highly unlikely that anyone else will ever have the opportunity to usurp your identity for purposes of e-mail-but it is still a possibility. But if you use an encryption tool, such as PGP or GnuPG, to digitally sign your e-mails, recipients who have your public key will be able to determine that nobody could have sent the e-mail in question without having access to your private key-and you should definitely have a private key that is well protected.
#5: Avoid unsecured networks.
If, for some reason, you absolutely positively must access an e-mail account that does not authorize over an encrypted connection, never access that account from a public or otherwise unsecured network. Ever. Under any circumstances. It is not a bad idea to pay attention to what is around you when you are out of the office and emailing. Trust no one that you do not absolutely have to trust, and recognize the dangers and potential consequences of that trust.
Your e-mail security does not just affect you; it affects others, as well, if your e-mail account is compromised. Just ask Sarah Palin!
#6: Turn off automated addressing features.
As communication software accumulates more and more automated convenience features, we’ll see more and more cases of accidentally selecting the wrong recipients. A prime example is Microsoft Outlook’s “dreaded auto-fill feature,” where it is all too easy to accidentally select a recipient adjacent to your intended recipient in the drop-down list. This can be particularly problematic when discussing private matters such as business secrets.
#7: Use BCC when sending to multiple recipients.
It’s a bad idea, from a security perspective, to share e-mail addresses with people who have no need for them. It is also rude to share someone’s e-mail address with strangers without permission. Every time you send out an e-mail to multiple recipients with all the recipients’ names in the To: or CC: fields, you’re sharing all those e-mail addresses with all the recipients. E-mail addresses that are not explicitly meant to be shared with the entire world should, in e-mails addressed to multiple recipients, be specified in the BCC: field – because each person will then be able to see that he or she is a recipient, but will not be able to see the e-mail addresses of anyone else in the BCC: field.
#8: Save e-mails only in a safe place.
No amount of encryption for sent e-mails will protect your privacy effectively if, after receiving and decrypting an e-mail, you store it in plain text on a machine to which other people have access. Sarah Palin found out the hard way that Webmail providers don’t do as good a job of ensuring stored e-mail privacy as we might like. Many users’ personal computers are not exactly set up with security in mind, either, as in the case of someone whose Windows home directory is set up as a CIFS share with a weak password.
#9: Only use private accounts for private e-mails.
Any e-mail you share with the world is likely to get targeted by spammers – both for purposes of sending mail to it and spoofing that e-mail address in the From: field of the e-mail headers. The more spammers and phishers who spoof your e-mail address that way, the more likely your e-mail address is to end up on spam blocker blacklists used by ISPs and lazy mail server sysadmins — and the more likely you are to have problems with your e-mails not getting to their intended recipients.
#10: Double-check the recipient, every time – especially on mailing lists.
Accidentally replying directly to someone who sent an e-mail to a mailing list, when you meant to reply to the list, isn’t a huge security issue. It can be kind of inconvenient, though, especially when you might never notice your e-mail didn’t actually get to the mailing list. The converse, however, can be a real problem: if you accidentally send something to the list that was intended strictly for a specific individual, you may end up publicly saying something embarrassing or, worse, accidentally divulging secrets to hundreds of people you don’t even know.