It might be worth considering carefully how safe the practice of opening essentially random email links might be. Are you opening the links with a full suite of forensic measures in place, or are you dropping curl $URL into your terminal on your workstation? It looks like WSL isn't exactly a sandbox. It does seem to already be used by some malware: https://research.checkpoint.com/beware-bashware-new-method-m...
In a world with drive-by exploits and where opening a link leaks information, it perhaps could be considered unsafe to open essentially random links from emails. I've definitely worked with developers who seem to believe that curl is magical and inures them against every possible attack.
Curiosity is a wonderful thing! It's just sometimes it can be dangerous to a person and to the people around them. It might not be a bad thing for people to learn a smidge of caution.
One of the best policies I ever witnessed: There was a second guest network with internet and nothing else for guests/consultants and facebook/twitter/porn (the company just paid for internet twice). Employees had a second crappy machine connected to the isolated guest network for this purpose.
In a world with drive-by exploits and where opening a link leaks information, it perhaps could be considered unsafe to open essentially random links from emails. I've definitely worked with developers who seem to believe that curl is magical and inures them against every possible attack.
Curiosity is a wonderful thing! It's just sometimes it can be dangerous to a person and to the people around them. It might not be a bad thing for people to learn a smidge of caution.