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Holiday deals are flooding your phone, and scammers are too. Watch for fake listings, phishing texts, and offers that seem just a little too good to be true.
The Phishing-as-a-Service kit Sneaky 2FA was found to use Browser-in-the-Browser attacks to steal login credentials.
Those too-good-to-be-true online deals often come from drop-shipping sellers, and that can leave you holding all the risk.
A copyright violation sounds serious, so cybercriminals are faking messages from the DMCA to lure you into handing over your X credentials.
Contacted out of the blue for a virtual interview? Be cautious. Attackers are using fake interviews to slip malware onto your device.
Google’s suing Lighthouse, a Chinese Phishing-as-a-Service platform that uses Google’s branding on scam sites to trick victims.
Think twice before clicking that "Secure Message" alert from your organization's spam filters. It might be a phish built to steal your credentials.
The only thing you’re winning here is a spot on marketing lists you never asked to join.
Tina Pal wants a word about your PayPal account—but it's a scam. Here’s how to spot the red flags and what to do if you’ve already called.