July 5 120,000 fake sites fuel Amazon Prime Day scams Amazon Prime Day shoppers face threats from 120,000-plus scam websites as cybercriminals prepare phishing traps and malware ahead of the July sales event.
July 4 Is your phone hacked? How to tell and what to do Signs your phone might be hacked include strange behavior, unauthorized texts, battery drain and pop-ups, while protection involves updating software and avoiding public Wi-Fi.
July 3 ATM jugging scam on the rise as thieves target victims Protect yourself from jugging, the rising crime by which thieves monitor ATM users and follow them to steal cash, with six practical safety tips to stay alert and secure.
July 2 How to detect fake Amazon emails and avoid impersonation scams Protect yourself from Amazon phishing scams by spotting red flags like suspicious sender addresses and spelling errors while using Amazon's Message Center to verify communications.
July 1 Meta AI’s new chatbot raises privacy alarms Meta’s new AI chatbot is getting personal, and it might be sharing more than you realize.
July 1 SparkKitty mobile malware targets Android and iPhone A new threat targets both Android and iPhone users: SparkKitty, a powerful mobile malware strain that scans private photos to steal cryptocurrency recovery phrases and other sensitive data.
June 30 9 online privacy risks you probably don’t know about Privacy risks are hiding in plain sight, as your personal data is likely being collected, tracked, and sold without your knowledge.
June 29 How I was tricked and locked out of Facebook after being hacked A woman's Facebook account takeover reveals dangerous social engineering tactics and provides lessons on recovery, avoiding scams and enacting stronger security measures.
June 28 5.4 million patient records exposed in healthcare data breach Major healthcare data analytics firm Episource had a cybersecurity incident exposing 5 million patients' medical records and personal information in recent breach.
June 28 New PayPal scam uses real emails to trick you A new sophisticated PayPal scam sends legitimate-looking emails from official PayPal addresses, using phone numbers instead of links to convince victims to download remote access tools.