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Latest news
They say they have videos, malware, and total control of your devices. Here's how to read a sextortion email like a security researcher instead of a victim.
We spent 48 hours exploring the dark web and found stolen identities, malware, scams, and a thriving cybercrime economy.
No matter what a website claims, nobody is selling legitimate GTA 6 early access. And scammers are counting on fans believing otherwise.
How to protect everything
Facebook ads spread fake Windows 11 downloads that steal passwords and crypto wallets
Scammers use fake “Gemini” AI chatbot to sell fake “Google Coin”
Outlook add-in goes rogue and steals 4,000 credentials and payment data
“Poseidon” Mac stealer distributed via Google ads
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How attackers use real IT tools to take over your computer
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A seemingly official voicemail turned out to be a scam. Learn how document delivery scams work and what to do if you receive one.
Retro gaming fans should be careful with GitHub projects that claim to be tools or plugins for their consoles. We looked at one example aimed at PlayStation Vita owners.
We found dozens of fake World Cup streaming sites using football as bait to funnel visitors through a malicious advertising network.
We found EtherRAT malware being distributed by a website with a strange homepage. Following the trail, we discovered a vast network of malicious infrastructures, distributing malware, malicious documents, remote desktop software, and phishing pages.
A convincing fake FACEIT verification page is stealing Steam accounts by using a fake login window that looks completely legitimate.
Cybercriminals are hiding malware in cracked and repacked games, infecting more than 400,000 devices worldwide.