If you walk through Cathays or look for a desk in the Arts and Social Sciences Library during May, consider it a rite of passage. It’s a mix of nervous energy, empty Monsters, and laptops ready to launch into space with the number of tabs they’re running. Welcome to…Exam season at Cardiff Uni, turning everyday routines into a blur of revision notes and late-night study sessions since 1883.
When you are operating on a few hours of sleep and trying to submit an assignment before a midnight deadline, digital security is usually the last thing on your mind, but a lot of people don’t realise that this is exactly when your digital footprint is most vulnerable. Cyber threats don’t pause just because you have a multi-thousand-word dissertation to finish and, if anything, bad actors rely on the fact that stressed, tired students are far more likely to make a quick mistake.
A Network of Networks
Most of us don’t spend our entire day at a single library desk. You might start your morning in a quiet corner of the university building, move to a crowded coffee shop closer to the city centre at lunchtime, and finish up at your kitchen table late into the evening. Because your routine shifts constantly, your devices are constantly connecting to a patchwork of different public networks.
Free WiFi is great when you need to download a lecture recording or verify a source, but these open networks are rarely secure. Without a second thought, people log into student portals, personal email accounts, and online banking apps while sharing a network with dozens of strangers. It takes very little technical effort for a malicious user on the same network to intercept unencrypted traffic or set up a fake hotspot that mimics the venue’s official connection. Taking a moment to verify your connection – or choosing to wait until you are back on a trusted network – can prevent your personal data from falling into the wrong hands.
Managing the Digital Keyring
With so many portals, university logins, and library services to keep track of, the temptation to reuse the same login details is incredibly strong. We all know the feeling of trying to remember a complex string of characters while a timer clicks down on a mock exam. Using a single, easily remembered password across multiple sites feels like a practical life hack, but it creates a massive single point of failure. If a breach occurs on a minor student forum or a retail site you used once, your main academic credentials are instantly compromised.
Rather than trying to memorize dozens of distinct variations, it’s far more efficient to delegate that memory work entirely. Using a reliable password manager allows you to generate and store complex, unique combinations for every account without the headache of remembering them. It means your digital assets remain secure even if one specific platform suffers a security breach, allowing you to focus your mental energy on actual revision instead of account recovery.
Urgency and Phishing
There’s more to think about right now than any other time of the year and, when you are deep in the zone, a sudden email notification can easily break your concentration. Attackers frequently exploit academic timelines by sending highly sophisticated phishing emails that mimic official university communications. You might receive a message claiming there is an urgent update to your exam timetable, a problem with your tuition fees, or an immediate issue with your essay submission portal.
These emails are specifically engineered to trigger panic. They include official-looking logos, formal language, and a prominent link demanding immediate action. In the rush to resolve the issue and get back to studying, it’s easy to click through and input your login details without double-checking the sender’s actual address. Taking a breath and verifying the sender – or logging into the student portal directly through your browser rather than clicking email links – is the simplest way to spot these traps before they disrupt your academic year.
