The Phantom Menace: how gamers of different ages are being attacked
Why scammers are more likely to target kids than hardcore gamers, how they do it, and what they want to steal
145 articles
Why scammers are more likely to target kids than hardcore gamers, how they do it, and what they want to steal
Cybercriminals are distributing a Trojan stealer under the guise of a ChatGPT desktop client for Windows. We delve into the details and ways to protect yourself.
Illegal businesses in the shadow economy need employees no less than their legal counterparts. Let’s take a look at how “dark HR” works.
How to know if you’re facing a scam: we identify all the red flags in a recent scam that deployed a fake cryptocurrency exchange
Here are some simple tips to protect your funds from fraudsters, phishers and carders when shopping online.
Scammers are sending e-mails under the guise of government agencies to coax personal data and money out of users.
How scammers swindle users out of cryptocurrency through a fake Nvidia giveaway supposedly worth 50,000 BTC.
How scammers lure YouTube users to a fake website where a purported bug lets them exchange Bitcoin at an excellent rate.
How cybercriminals extract bank card details pretending to be DHL.
Here’s how phishers extract phone numbers and credentials from users of Wise.
We explain how scammers steal cryptowallets through phishing.
What is a seed phrase, how scammers use it to steal cryptowallets, and how to protect your MetaMask account.
We reveal more cunning cybercriminal tricks and explain how to guard against scams.
We analyze some typical examples of phishing bait for movie streamers.
Some forged Green Pass certificates on sale on the Internet pass validation tests. However, it’s still not a good idea to buy them, and here’s why.
Scammers are sending fake transfer receipt notifications to Luno cryptoexchange users and stealing their credentials.
Received a confirmation e-mail for a purchase you didn’t make with a phone number to contact the company? Beware, it’s vishing.
Scammers are distributing malware and adware made to look like Windows 11.
Scammers pretend to represent brands on Twitter and lure customers onto phishing websites. Here’s how to avoid it.