INTERNET DEVICE SECURITY AND SOCIAL MEDIA DATA PROTECTION:
Thanks to COVID, stalkers, high-crime and urban blight, there is no longer any way to meet people in the “real world”. You have to use the internet to connect. Corporations, though, use this fact to explot citizens on the web. That is NOT acceptable. You can file complaints with Congress and over 120 government agencies to make them stop abusing the public. You can use PR Newswire, and other media services, to spread the word. Let’s fix this!
Did you know that social media sites like Google and Facebook, and most corporate ‘dating sites, exist to harvest your private data, cull your private info for political parties, and use you like ‘data cattle’ on their abusive digital data farms?
You can help Congess, the FTC, The DOJ and public inerest groups sue these bad actors into oblivion.
You should never, ever, use an online meeting/dating/networking site unless you have read all of the user comments and postings about these sites at:
https://www.reddit.com/r/OnlineDating
Read the facts and then help launch, and testify, in the ongoing lawsuits and CBS News 60 Minutes-type video documentaries that are helping to put these bad guys out of business. Google, Facebook and the dating sites have not been shut down yet because they pay the largest dollar number of bribes to politicians.
Read and share the following facts, court records and government reports with all of your friends:
DATING SITES HAVE NOW BEEN CAUGHT USING HUGE NUMBERS OF FAKE PROFILE WRITERS
Every person on a dating site is now probably fake
Truth-Lies-and-Online-Dating-Secrets-t
SILICON VALLEY___S SOCIAL INFECTION IS DESTROYING THE WORLD
SOCIAL-MEDIA-GIANTS-CENSOR-IDEOLOGY
WHY FACEBOOK IS THE MOST SOCIALLY DESTRUCTIVE
“…A company like ( or that is) ‘Fusion GPS’ and/or ‘Black Cube’ hires people to pretend to be girls on dating sites to bug industry leaders and other Congressional advisors. Meeting someone at a Peets Coffee in-person would solve all of your security concerns but most people will not take the time to drive to a coffee shop. Online you have had to deal with hundreds of deepfakes, scammers, Russian guys pretending to be dates, ai bots, Fusion GPS and Black Cube attackers and other fakes on these dating sites. Black Cube and Fusion GPS have cost well known people millions of dollars in losses via web hacking and harvesting. Nobody should believe a single person on these date sites until they have met them in person. Most of the profiles have turned out to be computerized data harvesters and foreign scammers. Every text message on a dating site is text harvested every few minutes by scanning software from many third parties.
Don’t relay any personal data across third-party dating servers because they sell your text to Google and collection agencies and political parties and let hackers in. You can see how bad it is by all of the news headlines about web dangers. Most of the profiles on these sites are bots, Eastern Bloc scammers or hired shills pretending to be real people. The only way to prove they are not a bad guy is to meet in person…”
Shoshana Zuboff’s, The Age of Surveillance Capitalism – Why Twitter, Google, Facebook, Instagram, YouTube, Alphabet are the SAME Thing, The SAME SICKO tech elites and the same kinds of social privacy RAPE against citizens!
https://www.contagious.com/news-and-views/shoshana-zuboff-on-the-age-of-surveillance-capitalismTHE MEDIA ASSASSINS: POLITICAL KILL ORDERS AND STATE-SPONSORED CHARACTER ASSASSINATIONS – How A Modern Character Assassination and Political “Kill Order” Is Executed By the Silicon Valley Oligarchs and their total control of propaganda media. Patrick George At Jalopnik attacks outsiders under contract with Elon Musk and the DNC. Silicon Valley campaign finance oligarchs hire him to run hatchet jobs on innocent outsiders and then Gawker-Gizmodo-Jalopnik uses their financial partnership with the DNC’s Google to push the character assassination articles to the top of Google web products and searches.—- Patrick George, Adrian Covert, John Hermann and Nick Cook are the sexually degenerate cabin boys that report to boy-loving sleaze-tabloid oligarch Nick Denton. They created the Fake News crisis in the media by flooding the internet with defamation posts and reprisal hatchet job articles designed to damage political enemies of the Socialists. They coordinate a large number of the character assassination efforts at Gawker, Gizmodo, Jalopnik, CNN, New York Times and other propaganda outlets. These Millennial boys are “Media Rapists” and should be treated as abusers.– How and why did a Donald Trump stripper-date named “Stormy” or an Elon Musk sex party or a Kavanaugh drinking incident or the Moonves and Weinstein indiscretions suddenly hit the news at about the same time in news history?– In addition to actual murder, Politicians and Silicon Valley Oligarchs hire operatives to end people’s lives in other creative ways.–— It is all part of the modern trend in vendetta, revenge and political payback when a Senator or a tech oligarch issues a “kill order” on an opponent. – The client does not like to get their hands dirty so the actual social hit job is performed by companies such as: IN-Q-Tel –; Gawker Media – ; Jalopnik – ; Gizmodo Media – ; K2 Intelligence – ; WikiStrat – ; Podesta Group – ; Fusion GPS – ; Google – ; YouTube – ; Alphabet – ; Facebook – ; Twitter – ; Think Progress – ; Media Matters – ; Black Cube – ; Mossad – ; Correct The Record – ; Sand Line – ; Blackwater – ; Undercover Global Ltd -; Stratfor – ; ShareBlue – ; Wikileaks ; Cambridge Analytica – ; Sid Blumenthal- ; David Brock – ; PR Firm Sunshine Sachs ; Covington and Burling – ; Buzzfeed – ; Perkins Coie – ; Wilson Sonsini – ; and hundreds of others…These are the people and companies that except cash, revolving door jobs, political appointments, insider trading stock in Silicon Valley tech companies, prostitutes and real estate in exchange for destroying the lives of others….”
Do You Want To Learn More About How You Can Help With Consumer Protection And Consumer Rights?
HOW TO REPORT CORRUPTION
When you report a political corruption crime, know that each government staffer you talk to has their own agenda.
At least one, or more, of the public officials you report the matter to will try to stonewall or harm your efforts in order to protect their crony associates. To avoid cover-ups, never report a crime incident to only one source, always cc: as many related entities as possible. If a person listed is no longer with that organization, go to the press contact at that organizations website and request a new contact.
You have a large number of people who will support you. The only people who try to shut-down whistle-blowers are those who are engaged in crimes. In a typical report, there are usually many third party BCC or CC’s like this, for example:
Marcel Reid, Pacifica Whistleblower Liaison
Michael McCray, ACORN 8
Zena Crenshaw-Logal, Executive Director, National Judicial Conduct & Disability Law Project
Tom Devine, Legal Director, Government Accountability Project (GAP)
Lawrence Lucas, President, USDA Coalition of Minority Employees
Tanya Ward Jordan, Founder, Coalition for Change (C4C)
Jason Zuckerman, Partner Zuckerman Law Firm; Former Senior Counsel, for the U.S. Office of Special Counsel
Dan Meyer, Executive Director of Intelligence Community Whistleblowing and Source Protection; Office of the Intelligence Community Inspector General.
Gloria Minott, Public Affairs Director WPFW
William Bergman, 9/11 Whistleblower, Truth in Accounting
Zena Crenshaw-Logal, Executive Director, National Judicial Conduct & Disability Law Project
Danielle Brian, Executive Director, Project on Government Oversight (POGO)
Michael McCray, FEW/LEW
Tanya Ward Jordan, Founder, Coalition for Change (C4C)
Andrew Kreig, Executive Director, Justice Integrity Project
David Grogen, U.S. Marshal Service, Justice Department
Arthuretta Holms Martin, Coalition for Change
Paulette Taylor, Civil Rights Chair, Coalition for Change
Arlene Englehardt, Former Pacifica Executive Director
Glenn Greenwald, Journalist
Marcel Reid, Pacifica Whistleblower Liaison
Sharyl Attkisson – Former CBS Investigative Reporter
Andy Lee Roth, Director, Project Censored
Micky Huff, Director, Project Censored
Kristina Borjesson, Freelance Journalist (ABC, CBS, NBC)
Matt Tabbii, Investigative Reporter
Cathy Ball, Legislative Representative, National Treasury Employees Union
Shahid Buttar, Executive Director, Bill of Rights Defense Committee
Keith Wrightson, Worker Safety and Health Advocate, Public Citizen
Marcel Reid, ACORN 8
Zena Crenshaw-Logal, Exploring the Vitality of Stare Decisis in America
Editors- ProPublica Journal
Michael McCray, General Counsel, FEW/LEF
Krista Boyd, Counsel, House Oversight and Government Reform Committee
Charity Wilson, Legislative Representative, American Federation of Government Employees
Robert MacLean, U.S. Air Marshal Whistleblower
Tristan Leavitt, Investigative Counsel, Senate Judiciary Committee
Larry Criscione, NRC Whistleblower
Amanda Hitt, Director, Food Integrity Campaign
Pete Sepp, Executive Vice President, National Taxpayers Union
Zena Crenshaw-Logal, Executive Director, National Judicial Conduct & Disability Law Project
Tony Norman, Vice Chair, Pacifica Foundation
Stephen Kohn, National Whistleblower Center
Zena Crenshaw-Logal, National Judicial Conduct and Disability Law Project
Andy Shallal, Mayoral Candidate (Community Activism)
Joseph Nacchio- CEO Quest Media Former (Corporate Responsibility)
Brad Birkenfeld – UBS Whistleblower (Frank Wills Award)
Jason Zuckerman, Partner Zuckerman Law Firm; Former Senior Counsel, for the U.S. Office of Special Counsel.
Jordan Thomas, Chairman of Whistleblower Practice, Labaton Sucharow
Eric Ben-Artzi, Deutsche Bank financial whistleblower
Lisa Donner, Executive Director, Americans for Financial Reform
Robert MacLean, landmark whistleblowing case on the WPEA
Shirine Moazed, Chief, Investigation and Prosecution Division, U.S. Office of Special Counsel (OSC)
Mick Anderson, OSC Public Servant Award Winner
Senator Elizabeth Warren (D-MA)
Senator John Boozman (R-AR)
The Honorable Blake Farenthold (R-TX)
The Honorable Jackie Speier (D-CA)
Special Counsel Carolyn Lerner (OSC)
Patricia St. Clair, Assistant Director; Training and Outreach Division, EEOC, Office of Federal Sector
Dr. David Tharp, Veterans Administration Whistleblower
Daniel Brennin, Project on Government Oversight
Lydia Dennett, Investigator on behalf of Danielle Brian, Executive Director, Project on Government Oversight (POGO)
Paulette Taylor, Civil Rights Chair, Coalition for Change
David Grogan, U.S. Marshal Service, Justice Department
Zena Crenshaw-Logal, Executive Director, National Judicial Conduct & Disability Law Project
Organizations to carbon-copy Contact:
The FBI
The GAO
The U.S. Senate Ethics Committee
Edward Snowden
Julian Assange
Wikipedia
Etc…
Professional hacker reveals the five mistakes that allow anybody to crack into your smartphone within SECONDS – It is very DUMB to own a ‘SMART’ phone! Your iPhone, Android phone or ‘Smart’ device is ruining your life
Keiran Burge, a legal hacker, tells MailOnline what five common mistakes people make that let cybercriminals access their private data and take control of their devices.
Many of us would feel lost without our smartphones in hand – but what if that same device became a tool for criminals?
Kieran Burge, a security consultant at Prism Infosec, has revealed the five common mistakes that could let him crack into your smartphone within seconds.
As a penetration tester – a legal hacker who tests companies’ cybersecurity to find weaknesses before criminals do – Kieran knows what he’s talking about.
And he says that simple mistakes such as reusing passwords, clicking on dodgy links and sharing too much information on social media could land you in hot water.
So, are you guilty of these security blunders? Read on to find out.
Kieran Burge, a security consultant at Prism Infosec, has revealed the five common mistakes that could let him crack into your smartphone within seconds
As a penetration tester – a legal hacker who tests companies’ cybersecurity to find weaknesses before criminals do – Kieran knows what he’s talking about
1. Using out-of-date software
Keiran told MailOnline that one of the first things he and other hackers look for when preparing an attack is out-of-date software.
‘Out-of-date software is a really big issue because, if the software has been updated, it’s probably because there is a security issue’, he explained.
Software, whether it is the operating system of your iPhone or the control system for a factory, often has some sort of vulnerability.
While these can quickly fixed by developers, they are also often shared online through forums and hacker communities.
If you haven’t updated your software to include the fix, Keiran explains, ‘people can get in and steal really sensitive information and even sometimes take control of the software.’
Keiran told MailOnline that one of the first things he and other hackers look for when preparing an attack is out-of-date software
The vulnerabilities can take many different forms and allow criminals to cause serious disruption for companies and individuals.
These attacks are often opportunistic as criminal groups scan online archives for out-of-date versions of software.
Keiran says the recent crippling hack on the British Library was likely to have been an opportunistic attack of this kind
To keep safe online, Keiran says you should ‘always ensure that your software is up to date.’
2. Reusing passwords
Another common way that hackers get hold of your personal data, according to Keiran, is by exploiting reused passwords.
Keiran told MailOnline: ‘No matter what site you’re giving information to you, you don’t know what they’re going to do with that information or how they’re going to protect it.’
He says that the big risk of re-using passwords is that if even one site you use is compromised, it can give hackers access to all of your accounts.
‘As soon as a company is breached there’s usually a big database dump that gets put on the darkweb,’ Keiran said.
The dark web is an encrypted part of the internet not accessible with normal search engines which is often used to host criminal marketplaces.
In April this year, an international raid brought down a hacker bazaar called Genesis Market which the FBI claims offered access to over 80 million account access credentials.
Keiran said: ‘There are going to be databases out there with user name and password combinations for your accounts.’
‘If you’re reusing passwords then any hacker can take that combination and use it to take control of another company.’
Reusing passwords puts you at risk because your account credentials can be stolen and resold on marketplaces like Genesis Market which the AI took down earlier this year
3. Giving out too much information online
‘On a personal level, for someone in their day-to-day activities one of the most important things that people need to think about is how much information they’re sharing online,’ Keiran said.
In ‘red teaming’ – a cybersecurity term for testing the defences of a company – one of the first places Keiran and his team look is social media.
‘We can do almost anything to get into a company, but one of the tools we use is harvesting data from social media,’ Keiran explained.
‘We scour social media sites like LinkedIn to see what we can find.’
Not only might this reveal usernames which can be linked to stolen account credentials, but it also opens the door to a whole range of other attacks.
One of the most insidious attacks that this exposes you to is a technique called ‘sim swapping’ or ‘sim-jacking’.
Keiran explains that hackers will search the web for information such as your date of birth, address, and even the answers to common security questions like your mother’s maiden name.
‘Once you have all that information you can use social engineering techniques to ring up their mobile provider and convince them to transfer the mobile number to a new sim,’ he said.
Now, whenever a text or call would go to the victim’s phone it instead goes straight to the attackers.
‘Once they have that you suddenly have access to all the multi-factor authentication sites that the person is signed up to,’ he added.
This could include work email accounts, online shopping accounts, and even online banking.
‘Everything you put up online you no longer have control over, and if you’re unlucky and all that information links up then you can get your identity partly stolen,’ Keiran warned.
Giving away too much information online can leave you at risk of Sim-Jacking attacks in which hackers transfer your phone number to a new sim to intercept your calls and messages (stock image)
4. Connecting to unprotected public networks
‘In the last few years something that’s become a lot more important is remote working,’ Keiran said.
‘A big part of that involves people going to cafes like Starbucks and connecting to their public WiFi.’
The problem is that these kinds of public networks use a type of system called ‘open authentication’ to connect your device to the web without having to use identity verification.
While this makes it easy for you to quickly jump onto the coffee shop WiFi to send a few e
Professional hacker reveals the five mistakes that allow anybody to crack into your smartphone within SECONDS
Keiran Burge, a legal hacker, tells MailOnline what five common mistakes people make that let cybercriminals access their private data and take control of their devices.
Many of us would feel lost without our smartphones in hand – but what if that same device became a tool for criminals?
Kieran Burge, a security consultant at Prism Infosec, has revealed the five common mistakes that could let him crack into your smartphone within seconds.
As a penetration tester – a legal hacker who tests companies’ cybersecurity to find weaknesses before criminals do – Kieran knows what he’s talking about.
And he says that simple mistakes such as reusing passwords, clicking on dodgy links and sharing too much information on social media could land you in hot water.
So, are you guilty of these security blunders? Read on to find out.
Kieran Burge, a security consultant at Prism Infosec, has revealed the five common mistakes that could let him crack into your smartphone within seconds
As a penetration tester – a legal hacker who tests companies’ cybersecurity to find weaknesses before criminals do – Kieran knows what he’s talking about
1. Using out-of-date software
Keiran told MailOnline that one of the first things he and other hackers look for when preparing an attack is out-of-date software.
‘Out-of-date software is a really big issue because, if the software has been updated, it’s probably because there is a security issue’, he explained.
Software, whether it is the operating system of your iPhone or the control system for a factory, often has some sort of vulnerability.
While these can quickly fixed by developers, they are also often shared online through forums and hacker communities.
If you haven’t updated your software to include the fix, Keiran explains, ‘people can get in and steal really sensitive information and even sometimes take control of the software.’
Keiran told MailOnline that one of the first things he and other hackers look for when preparing an attack is out-of-date software
The vulnerabilities can take many different forms and allow criminals to cause serious disruption for companies and individuals.
These attacks are often opportunistic as criminal groups scan online archives for out-of-date versions of software.
Keiran says the recent crippling hack on the British Library was likely to have been an opportunistic attack of this kind
To keep safe online, Keiran says you should ‘always ensure that your software is up to date.’
2. Reusing passwords
Another common way that hackers get hold of your personal data, according to Keiran, is by exploiting reused passwords.
Keiran told MailOnline: ‘No matter what site you’re giving information to you, you don’t know what they’re going to do with that information or how they’re going to protect it.’
He says that the big risk of re-using passwords is that if even one site you use is compromised, it can give hackers access to all of your accounts.
‘As soon as a company is breached there’s usually a big database dump that gets put on the darkweb,’ Keiran said.
The dark web is an encrypted part of the internet not accessible with normal search engines which is often used to host criminal marketplaces.
In April this year, an international raid brought down a hacker bazaar called Genesis Market which the FBI claims offered access to over 80 million account access credentials.
Keiran said: ‘There are going to be databases out there with user name and password combinations for your accounts.’
‘If you’re reusing passwords then any hacker can take that combination and use it to take control of another company.’
Reusing passwords puts you at risk because your account credentials can be stolen and resold on marketplaces like Genesis Market which the AI took down earlier this year
3. Giving out too much information online
‘On a personal level, for someone in their day-to-day activities one of the most important things that people need to think about is how much information they’re sharing online,’ Keiran said.
In ‘red teaming’ – a cybersecurity term for testing the defences of a company – one of the first places Keiran and his team look is social media.
‘We can do almost anything to get into a company, but one of the tools we use is harvesting data from social media,’ Keiran explained.
‘We scour social media sites like LinkedIn to see what we can find.’
Not only might this reveal usernames which can be linked to stolen account credentials, but it also opens the door to a whole range of other attacks.
One of the most insidious attacks that this exposes you to is a technique called ‘sim swapping’ or ‘sim-jacking’.
Keiran explains that hackers will search the web for information such as your date of birth, address, and even the answers to common security questions like your mother’s maiden name.
‘Once you have all that information you can use social engineering techniques to ring up their mobile provider and convince them to transfer the mobile number to a new sim,’ he said.
Now, whenever a text or call would go to the victim’s phone it instead goes straight to the attackers.
‘Once they have that you suddenly have access to all the multi-factor authentication sites that the person is signed up to,’ he added.
This could include work email accounts, online shopping accounts, and even online banking.
‘Everything you put up online you no longer have control over, and if you’re unlucky and all that information links up then you can get your identity partly stolen,’ Keiran warned.
Giving away too much information online can leave you at risk of Sim-Jacking attacks in which hackers transfer your phone number to a new sim to intercept your calls and messages (stock image)
4. Connecting to unprotected public networks
‘In the last few years something that’s become a lot more important is remote working,’ Keiran said.
‘A big part of that involves people going to cafes like Starbucks and connecting to their public WiFi.’
The problem is that these kinds of public networks use a type of system called ‘open authentication’ to connect your device to the web without having to use identity verification.
While this makes it easy for you to quickly jump onto the coffee shop WiFi to send a few emails, it also puts you at risk of attacks from cybercriminals.
Open authentication means that the data you send across the network is not encrypted and can be captured by anybody else on the network.
‘Someone could be sat outside a public WiFi network and just listening in on what’s being sent,’ Keiran warned.
‘They could be in the cafe or they could be using specialist hardware to increase the range at which they can listen in on the network.
‘They can be hidden a safe distance away then all they have to do is listen and wait.’
To avoid personal information like banking details being stolen from public WiFi, Keiran recommends that you always use a VPN when in public.
These services encrypt your data so that any eavesdroppers on the network won’t be able to read what your sending.
On public WiFi anyone could be listening in on the information you’re sending, waiting to steal sensitive information such as bank details and passwords
5. Clicking dodgy links
Finally, Keiran says that sending dodgy links is still the most common way that people get hacked.
Phishing scams remain the most prevalent attack in the UK according to the UK’s National Cyber Security Centre (NCSC).
In 2022 alone, 7.1 million malicious emails and URLs were flagged to the NCSC – the equivalent of nearly 20,000 reports a day.
Keiran explains that hackers will send fake emails and text messages to targets containing links to malicious websites or instructions to download software.
Once one of these links has been clicked, it gives criminals a window to install malware on their victim’s device which can steal data and even take control.
But as sophisticated as a computer virus might be, hackers still need someone to follow a link
Biden And Obama Govt Use Silicon Valley To Put An Electronic Dog Leash On Every Citizen
– Never sign-in to any web site and always hide anything that could identify you on-line.
Want to help end the tech oligarch’s rape of society? Never, EVER: use, read, quote, link to, paste from, or refer to; anything on corrupt and contrived: Twitter, Google – Alphabet – Facebook – Meta – Instagram – Netflix or YouTube! Don’t expand their reach! Don’t be their digital bitch! Stop being an addict to Silicon Valley’s social media scam! Keep the battery out of your phone so Big Tech can’t continue to spy on you. Did you know you CAN’T turn an iPhone off. Apple iPhone’s pretend to be “off” but still monitor you with reserve power. Congress should shut these companies down, but they don’t because these companies pay the largest bribes on Earth to politicians! Demand that Congress shut down these big tech abusers that cause child suicides, bullying, sex trafficking, money laundering, tax evasion, political bribery, election manipulation and other social crimes.
to a compromised website or download files containing hidden malware.
‘You need to be vigilant of anyone that is sending you something when you don’t expect it,’ Kieran concluded.
‘Don’t click on dodgy links, don’t download dodgy files, don’t fall into their trap.’
Share or comment on this article: I’m a professional hacker – and these are the 5 things that would allow me to crack into your smartphone within SECONDS
EVERY DEVICE that SILICON VALLEY SELLS YOU, OR CONNECTS TO YOU, WILL HURT YOU AND YOUR FAMILY!
All Electronics that you have log-in to will ALWAYS eventually be hacked and spy on you and manipulate you and report you to government and political bosses.
“AI” = Spying on you, data rape, monopolistic control & political information manipulation
“Google” = Spying on you, data rape, monopolistic control & political information manipulation
“Amazon” = Spying on you, data rape, monopolistic control & political information manipulation
“Meta” = Spying on you, data rape, monopolistic control & political information manipulation
“The Cloud” = Spying on you, data rape, monopolistic control & political information manipulation
NEVER trust ANY of these things and never connect to them!
Biden And Obama Govt Use Silicon Valley To Put An Electronic Dog Leash On Every Citizen
– Never sign-in to any web site and always hide anything that could identify you on-line.
Want to help end the tech oligarch’s rape of society? Never, EVER: use, read, quote, link to, paste from, or refer to; anything on corrupt and contrived: Twitter, Google – Alphabet – Facebook – Meta – Instagram – Netflix or YouTube! Don’t expand their reach! Don’t be their digital bitch! Stop being an addict to Silicon Valley’s social media scam! Keep the battery out of your phone so Big Tech can’t continue to spy on you. Did you know you CAN’T turn an iPhone off. Apple iPhone’s pretend to be “off” but still monitor you with reserve power. Congress should shut these companies down, but they don’t because these companies pay the largest bribes on Earth to politicians! Demand that Congress shut down these big tech abusers that cause child suicides, bullying, sex trafficking, money laundering, tax evasion, political bribery, election manipulation and other social crimes.
mails, it also puts you at risk of attacks from cybercriminals.
Open authentication means that the data you send across the network is not encrypted and can be captured by anybody else on the network.
‘Someone could be sat outside a public WiFi network and just listening in on what’s being sent,’ Keiran warned.
‘They could be in the cafe or they could be using specialist hardware to increase the range at which they can listen in on the network.
‘They can be hidden a safe distance away then all they have to do is listen and wait.’
To avoid personal information like banking details being stolen from public WiFi, Keiran recommends that you always use a VPN when in public.
These services encrypt your data so that any eavesdroppers on the network won’t be able to read what your sending.
On public WiFi anyone could be listening in on the information you’re sending, waiting to steal sensitive information such as bank details and passwords
5. Clicking dodgy links
Finally, Keiran says that sending dodgy links is still the most common way that people get hacked.
Phishing scams remain the most prevalent attack in the UK according to the UK’s National Cyber Security Centre (NCSC).
In 2022 alone, 7.1 million malicious emails and URLs were flagged to the NCSC – the equivalent of nearly 20,000 reports a day.
Keiran explains that hackers will send fake emails and text messages to targets containing links to malicious websites or instructions to download software.
Once one of these links has been clicked, it gives criminals a window to install malware on their victim’s device which can steal data and even take control.
But as sophisticated as a computer virus might be, hackers still need someone to follow a link
Biden And Obama Govt Use Silicon Valley To Put An Electronic Dog Leash On Every Citizen
– Never sign-in to any web site and always hide anything that could identify you on-line.
Want to help end the tech oligarch’s rape of society? Never, EVER: use, read, quote, link to, paste from, or refer to; anything on corrupt and contrived: Twitter, Google – Alphabet – Facebook – Meta – Instagram – Netflix or YouTube! Don’t expand their reach! Don’t be their digital bitch! Stop being an addict to Silicon Valley’s social media scam! Keep the battery out of your phone so Big Tech can’t continue to spy on you. Did you know you CAN’T turn an iPhone off. Apple iPhone’s pretend to be “off” but still monitor you with reserve power. Congress should shut these companies down, but they don’t because these companies pay the largest bribes on Earth to politicians! Demand that Congress shut down these big tech abusers that cause child suicides, bullying, sex trafficking, money laundering, tax evasion, political bribery, election manipulation and other social crimes.
to a compromised website or download files containing hidden malware.
‘You need to be vigilant of anyone that is sending you something when you don’t expect it,’ Kieran concluded.
‘Don’t click on dodgy links, don’t download dodgy files, don’t fall into their trap.’
Share or comment on this article: I’m a professional hacker – and these are the 5 things that would allow me to crack into your smartphone within SECONDS
EVERY DEVICE that SILICON VALLEY SELLS YOU, OR CONNECTS TO YOU, WILL HURT YOU AND YOUR FAMILY!
All Electronics that you have log-in to will ALWAYS eventually be hacked and spy on you and manipulate you and report you to government and political bosses.
“AI” = Spying on you, data rape, monopolistic control & political information manipulation
“Google” = Spying on you, data rape, monopolistic control & political information manipulation
“Amazon” = Spying on you, data rape, monopolistic control & political information manipulation
“Meta” = Spying on you, data rape, monopolistic control & political information manipulation
“The Cloud” = Spying on you, data rape, monopolistic control & political information manipulation
NEVER trust ANY of these things and never connect to them!
Biden And Obama Govt Use Silicon Valley To Put An Electronic Dog Leash On Every Citizen
– Never sign-in to any web site and always hide anything that could identify you on-line.
Want to help end the tech oligarch’s rape of society? Never, EVER: use, read, quote, link to, paste from, or refer to; anything on corrupt and contrived: Twitter, Google – Alphabet – Facebook – Meta – Instagram – Netflix or YouTube! Don’t expand their reach! Don’t be their digital bitch! Stop being an addict to Silicon Valley’s social media scam! Keep the battery out of your phone so Big Tech can’t continue to spy on you. Did you know you CAN’T turn an iPhone off. Apple iPhone’s pretend to be “off” but still monitor you with reserve power. Congress should shut these companies down, but they don’t because these companies pay the largest bribes on Earth to politicians! Demand that Congress shut down these big tech abusers that cause child suicides, bullying, sex trafficking, money laundering, tax evasion, political bribery, election manipulation and other social crimes.