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Staying Secure While You’re Away from Campus

May 1, 2026

Summer break changes how you use your university account. You are traveling, working, taking classes online, or just using different devices and networks than usual. At the same time, your account, data, and access to university systems stay active. When routines change and attention drops, that is when attackers take advantage.

Protecting Your Account

Your account is the most important thing to protect. If someone gets access to it, they can see your email, files, financial information, and more. Multi-factor authentication (MFA) is one of your best defenses, but only if you use it correctly. If you get an MFA prompt you did not request, deny it, change your password right away, and contact the help desk. Use a strong, unique password and be cautious with messages about jobs, payroll, financial aid, or account issues. Those are common ways attackers try to trick students.

Handling Your Data

Be mindful of how you handle your data. Not everything is equal. Classwork might be low risk, but things like financial aid information, student records, or personal details are more sensitive. During the summer, it is easy to download files to your personal laptop or use personal apps to store them. That adds risk. If you are unsure, treat the information as sensitive and keep it in approved university systems.

Most of your work likely lives in tools like Google Drive, OneDrive, or Box. These make sharing easy, but they also make it easy to share too much. Links set to “anyone with the link” or old group projects with leftover access can expose your files without you realizing it. Take a few minutes to review your sharing settings and remove access you no longer need.

Securing Your Devices and Connections

Your devices and internet connections also matter. Keep your laptop and phone updated, use screen locks, and enable security features like remote wipe if available. Public Wi-Fi, like in coffee shops, airports, or hotels, should be treated as untrusted. Avoid accessing sensitive university systems unless you are using a VPN. At home, make sure your router is updated and secured.

If you are traveling, keep things simple. Bring only the devices you need and avoid storing sensitive information locally. Be cautious about plugging into unknown chargers or connecting to unfamiliar devices or networks. A little awareness can prevent a lot of problems.

Watch for Advanced Scams

Scams are also getting more advanced. It is no longer just obvious phishing emails. Attackers are using AI to create realistic messages, voice calls, and even fake meeting invites. If something involves money, credentials, or urgency, stop and verify it through a separate, trusted method before taking action.

Review Shared Access

Shared access can also create risk. If you have worked on group projects, shared documents, or used shared accounts, those permissions may still exist. Take time to review what you have access to and what others have access to in your files. Remove anything that is no longer needed.

Reporting

If something feels off, report it to your campus IT help desk as soon as possible. The sooner it’s reported, the easier it is to contain. You can find contact information for your campus help desk here: Universities of Wisconsin (UW System) – IT Help Desks Contact Information.

Bottom Line

The bottom line is simple: protect your account, be careful with your data, secure your devices, and trust your instincts. A few consistent habits will go a long way in keeping you secure over the summer.

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Universities of Wisconsin
Ed Murphy
Associate Vice President for Information Security and Chief Information Security Officer
Office of Information Security
780 Regent Street, Suite 300
Madison, WI 53715

emurphy@uwsa.edu

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