The Current Plus: 68 days with no warrant, ditch Office (finally!), watch your fingers β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β In partnership with LinkedIn | Itβs another spectacular tech Tuesday, friend! For todayβs trivia question, did you know 91% of phishing scams originate from just one source? Is it β¦ A.) Phishing emails, B.) Compromised websites, C.) Unsecured WiβFi or D.) Bot networks? See you at the end for the answer! Letβs do this together. Tell the people in your life about this newsletter. Every little bit helps and keeps this free email coming to you. Forward it, send folks to GetKim.com, or use your unique referral code at the bottom of this email to win prizes. A big, big thanks in advance. β Kim π« First-time reader? Sign up here. (Itβs free!) IN THIS ISSUE π Donβt fall for this scam πͺ Should your front door be private? π Googleβs closing this down today |
TODAY'S TOP STORY Beware of βghost hackersβ A woman recently got a message from her mom on Facebook two weeks after her mom died. βHello, how are you doing today?β it read. Other family members got messages, too β some with, surprise, βGreat investment opportunities.β A so-called βghost hackerβ had struck her momβs account. Itβs a sick new scam. With account owners dead and families focused on grief, the hacking is more likely to go unnoticed. Itβs awful, and I want to make sure this doesnβt happen to you or someone you love. Itβs not just trolling and βinvestmentsβ Scammers also hack social media accounts to leapfrog into banking and retirement accounts, making it easy to steal directly from the person who passed. Ghost hackers monitor obituaries and death notices for potential targets. Then, they use their arsenal (hacking weak passwords, guessing security questions and accessing previously leaked credentials) to break in. The best offense is a good defense I know firsthand there are a ton of administrative tasks to take care of when a close family member dies β everything from canceling cellphone plans to executing the will. This list now also needs to include memorializing or deleting their social media accounts. Luckily, social networks have processes in place for this. For Facebook, ask Facebook to memorialize the account. Youβll need a link to an obituary. You can also request the profile be removed. Instagram has similar steps to Facebook, and the same goes for X. Now, take time to protect yourself On Facebook, you can designate a legacy contact to manage your account if you die. They wonβt be able to log in, read your messages or delete friends. On mobile, select the three-line icon at the bottom right. Scroll and tap Settings & privacy > Settings. Under βAccounts Center,β tap Personal details > Personal details > Account ownership and control > Memorialization. Click your name to select your legacy contact (and notify your contact theyβre now in that role). You can also decide if youβd rather have your account deleted after you pass. β
I have the full steps here for Google, Instagram, X, and your phone and bank accounts. Really, you need a digital estate plan I know itβs not fun to think about, but youβll be helping your loved ones immensely if you do. Here are my tips for writing this all out. β€οΈ Do your loved ones a favor and share this story. Ghost hacking is a big problem, and the more people we can warn, the better. |
WEB WATERCOOLER β οΈ Team Android warning: Banking malware is hiding in a fake version of the McAfee Security app. The scam kicks off with a fake text about an unauthorized transaction. Call the number, and a fraudster convinces you to download a βsecurityβ app containing malicious code. You have to be smarter than this. Shocking crime: A 13-year-old Pennsylvania girl stabbed and killed her mother after her mom took away her cellphone. The girl also stabbed her 11-year-old brother, who survived. Sheβs being charged as an adult with criminal homicide and aggravated assault. How can something like this happen? Bundle of joy: Microsoft is splitting up Office 365 and Teams. You have two options β stick with the all-in-one or buy just what you need. The a la carte price is $5.25 a month for Teams, but Office ranges from $7.75 monthly to $54.75, depending on the features. Need a free Office alternative? Here are seven. Ads are coming: Perplexity, the AI search engine backed by Jeff Bezos and other big-name investors, will soon slip in ads where you're most likely to click β on βrelated questionsβ that make up 40% of queries. Pay attention: The web as we know it is completely changing. RIP, Google Podcasts: Itβs no longer supported as of today. Move your subs over to YouTube Music pronto. Open the Google Podcasts app, select Export subscriptions at the top > Export to YouTube Music > Transfer > Continue. Hit Go to Library to view your subscriptions once the transfer is complete. Roll with it: Kids in Californiaβs Fresno Unified School District now use a new app to ask to go to the restroom. Students get two seven-minute bathroom breaks per day. Those who fail to return in time lose their bathroom rights. Why? Because students are hanging out in the bathrooms for too long, taking selfies. A new type of porch pirate: An Army vet was busted for lying about his disability to snag benefits, but the real shocker is how they caught him. Kansas cops filmed the guyβs front porch for 68 days, 15 hours a day, warrant-free. The court ruled that since cameras are everywhere, thereβs no reasonable expectation of privacy for the front of your home anymore. Oh, frunk it: The front trunk (βfrunkβ) door on Teslaβs $81,000 Cybertruck can chop off your fingers. A video on X showed veggies getting the guillotine treatment, making it an obvious and serious safety issue. Most cars with autoclosing doors have sensors for this exact reason. |
LISTEN UP | Smart water tech to save big bucks Heating water takes up one-fifth of your home's energy bill. Let's talk about using smart gadgets to cut that cost. Play Now β’ 4:53 βΆ |
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TECH LIFE UPGRADES Youβre too close: Holding your phone too close to your face puts extra pressure on your eyes. On iPhones, you can get a friendly warning. Open Settings > Screen time and toggle on Screen distance. Pro tip: If your text is too small, fix that under Settings > Accessibility > Display & Text Size. No more email: Need to transfer photos, vids and docs from your Android phone to a Windows PC? Forget email. Use Google Share. Itβs free and it works great! Pros use the 3β2β1 backup rule: Three copies of your data (original and two backups) are stored in at least two different formats (like an external drive and in the cloud), with one copy stored offsite. If you have important docs and biz data, store them offsite, too. If itβs just your personal stuff, the cloud will do. Using Facebook for events? Make sure someone who isnβt invited wonβt see the post. From your Home Feed, click Events > Create New Event. Add the details, click Privacy, then select Private. You canβt change this setting after the event is created, so doubleβcheck. Beep-beep: With a cheap setup, someone can copy the signal from your keyfob to open and steal your car. What can you do? Buy a signal-blocking pouch that can hold your keys, like this $9.99 shielded RFID-blocking one. It works! |
BY THE NUMBERS 40% of adults Have gone three or more days without interacting with another person. In our hyper-connected world, loneliness is a big problem. Community is so important, and online community counts. Check out the Komando Community if you want to connect with other tech lovers. 24% of drivers Report using Instagram behind the wheel. Itβs the most distracting app on the road. No like, post or comment is worth a car wreck. Please β it could save your life or someone elseβs. 9,200 ft. above the legal limit How high a drone was flying when it nearly collided with a British Airways plane. Pilots spotted the drone 30 miles from Heathrow at an altitude of 9,600 feet. The drone came within five feet of the planeβs wing. |
WHAT THE TECH? Beware of a bacon tree. It might be a ham bush. |
UNTIL NEXT TIME ... The answer: A.) Phishing emails are the most common source of cyberattacks by a lot β 91%! Last week, I shared some scammy email subject lines to watch out for. The short version: Beware of urgency, payment demands and attachments! π Since todayβs newsletter contains a story about a porch, hereβs a good joke for the road. A couple is sitting on their porch, sipping wine. The wife says, βI love you.β The husband says, βIs that you or the wine talking?β The wife replies, βItβs me talking to the wine.β Donβt be a statistic. Americans lost $1.1 billion in 2023 to impersonation scams. A smart step you can take right now: Protect your five most-used devices from malicious software for just $19 a year. You canβt beat that deal, folks. And thatβs it from me. See you back here tomorrow with a closer look at one of my favorite privacy tools. Until then, stay your amazing tech-loving self! β Kim |
Komando Referral Program Share this newsletter β Earn prizes! Step 1: Copy your unique referral link: https://www.komando.com/friends/?referralCode=0rvmdp6 Step 2: Share your link! Post it on social media, send it in a text or paste it into an email to a pal. If they sign up using that link, you get the credit! | |
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