Afleveringen
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This week, our three hosts â â â Dave Bittnerâ â â , â â â Joe Carriganâ â â , and â â â Maria Varmazisâ â â (also host of the â â â T-Minusâ â â Space Daily show) are sharing the latest in social engineering scams, phishing schemes, and criminal exploits that are making headlines. We start with a bit of follow up, one from listener Aaron, who shares some safety tips for chickens, and from listener Shannon, who writes in with a new fashion statement. Maria’s got the story on how Trump’s sweeping new tariffs are creating the “perfect storm” for scams, as cybercriminals exploit consumer confusion with fake fee requests, shady links, and urgent messages—three red flags experts say to watch for. Joe shares the story of a new FBI warning about an AI-driven phone scam targeting iPhone and Android users, where scammers impersonate senior U.S. officials through fake texts and voice messages to steal personal information via malicious links. Dave shares the story of a classic Hollywood pitch deck scam, where fake agents from bogus production companies like "Hollywood Talent Agency" and "Writer’s Edge Production" lure authors into paying for useless film services with promises of big-screen adaptations. We have our new Cluck of the Day, and this week, Jonathan Webster shares a classic scam attempt: a fake PayPal invoice PDF designed to trick recipients into calling a fraudulent support number or paying a bogus charge.
Resources and links to stories:
Trump tariffs create the ‘perfect storm’ for scams, cybersecurity expert says — 3 red flags to watch out for
FBI warns of new phone scam targeting iPhone, Android users, advises not to answer these messages
Senior US Officials Impersonated in Malicious Messaging Campaign
The Hollywood Talent Agency / Writers Edge Production Scam
Have a Catch of the Day you'd like to share? Email it to us at â â â â â [email protected]â â â â â . -
Please enjoy this encore of Word Notes.
The absence of telemetry that could help network defenders detect and respond to hostile attempts to compromise a system. -
Zijn er afleveringen die ontbreken?
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This week, our three hosts â â Dave Bittnerâ â , â â Joe Carriganâ â , and â â Maria Varmazisâ â (also host of the â â T-Minusâ â Space Daily show) are sharing the latest in social engineering scams, phishing schemes, and criminal exploits that are making headlines. Listener Jim notes that money launderers and couriers mentioned in recent episodes are often scam victims themselves, unknowingly processing fraudulent payments or delivering items, sometimes with tragic consequences like an innocent Uber driver being shot. Dave shares two close calls with scams this week: one where a bank employee saved a 75-year-old customer from losing $9,000 to a Facebook crypto scam, and another where a scammer impersonating “Officer Shane Kitchens” nearly tricked his mom into sending $3,500 for fake bail and ankle monitor fees after a family member was arrested. Joe's got three short stories this week—one is on how someone tried scamming his wife, another about a DoorDash driver who admitted to stealing $2.5 million in a delivery scam, and the last on a warning to billions of Gmail users to remain vigilant over a terrifying new phishing scheme. Maria sits down with Alex Hall, Trust and Safety Architect at Sift, to discuss the rise of job scams. Our catch of the day comes from Jonathan who writes in with a fake PayPal invoice.
Resources and links to stories:
You all saved my customer today
Loved one got arrested, next day got a call from a “Sergeant” at the county jail.
DoorDash driver admits to stealing $2.5M in delivery scam
Billions of Gmail users warned to 'remain vigilant' over terrifying scam
Have a Catch of the Day you'd like to share? Email it to us at â â â â [email protected]â â â â . -
Please enjoy this encore of Word Notes.
Ineffectual confirmation of a user's identity or authentication in session management.
CyberWire Glossary link: â https://thecyberwire.com/glossary/owasp-identification-and-authentication-failureâ
Audio reference link: “â Mr. Robot Hack - Password Cracking - Episode 1â .” YouTube Video. YouTube, September 21, 2016. -
And....we're back! This week, our three hosts Dave Bittner, Joe Carrigan, and Maria Varmazis (also host of the T-Minus Space Daily show) are all back to share the latest in social engineering scams, phishing schemes, and criminal exploits that are making headlines. The team shares three bits of follow-up and then breaks into their stories. Joe starts off sharing some stories about influencer fakery on fake private jet sets and a scam taking advantage of the RealID requirements coming into effect. Maria talks about "Scam Survivor Day" (it's a real thing). She also talks about a former Facebooker's tell-all "Careless People." Dave shares a story about fake Social Security statements. Our Catch of Day comes from Richard about a truck win.
Resources and links to stories:
Private Executive Jet
Private Jet Set for exhibitions, events and photo opportunities
REAL ID scams surge with arrival of deadline Wednesday
Don't Blame the Victim: 'Fraud Shame' and Cybersecurity
Facebook Allegedly Detected When Teen Girls Deleted Selfies So It Could Serve Them Beauty Ads
Beware of Fake Social Security Statement That Tricks Users to Install Malware
Have a Catch of the Day you'd like to share? Email it to us at â â â [email protected]â â â . -
Please enjoy this encore of Word Notes.
An open source Java-based software tool available from the Apache Software Foundation designed to log security and performance information.
CyberWire Glossary link: â https://thecyberwire.com/glossary/log4jâ
Audio reference link: “â CISA Director: The LOG4J Security Flaw Is the ‘Most Serious’ She’s Seen in Her Careerâ ,” by Eamon Javers (CNBC) and Jen Easterly (Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Director) YouTube, 20 December 20 2021. -
As Dave Bittner is at the RSA Conference this week, our hosts â â Maria Varmazis and â â Joe Carriganâ â , are sharing the latest in social engineering scams, phishing schemes, and criminal exploits that are making headlines. We start with some follow-up from José on episode 335, sharing how UK banking features like Faster Payments and the “Check Payee” function might have helped prevent a scam involving fake banking apps—and he even tells a wild tale of someone using a fake app to reverse-scam a bike thief. Joe covers the House’s overwhelming passage of the SHIELD Act to ban revenge porn—including deepfakes—and why critics say it could threaten encryption. He also shares a strong warning about trust and the real risks of sharing intimate images. Maria has the story of a surge in sophisticated subscription scams, where cybercriminals use fake “mystery box” websites, social media ads, and influencer impersonations to trick users into handing over credit card data and signing up for hidden recurring payments. Bitdefender researchers warn these polished scams are part of a broader evolution in social engineering, designed to bypass skepticism and evade detection. Our Catch of the Day comes from listener Rick, who received a suspicious email that appears to be from Harbor Freight—a popular U.S. retailer known for affordable tools and equipment—offering a “free gift” to the recipient… classic bait for a likely scam.
Resources and links to stories:
â House Passes Bill to Ban Sharing of Revenge Porn, Sending It to Trump
TAKE IT DOWN Act
Trump’s hasty Take It Down Act has “gaping flaws” that threaten encryption
Congress Passes TAKE IT DOWN Act Despite Major Flaws
Mystery Box Scams Deployed to Steal Credit Card Data
Have a Catch of the Day you'd like to share? Email it to us at â â [email protected]â â . -
Welcome in! You’ve entered, Only Malware in the Building. Join us each month to sip tea and solve mysteries about today’s most interesting threats. Your host is â Selena Larsonâ , â Proofpointâ intelligence analyst and host of their podcast â DISCARDEDâ . Inspired by the residents of a building in New York’s exclusive upper west side, Selena is joined by â N2K Networksâ â Dave Bittnerâ and our newest co-host, Keith Mularski, former FBI cybercrime investigator and now Chief Global Ambassador at Quintel.
Being a security researcher is a bit like being a detective: you gather clues, analyze the evidence, and consult the experts to solve the cyber puzzle. On this episode, our hosts discuss the growing trend of cybercriminals using legitimate remote monitoring and management (RMM) tools in email campaigns as a first-stage payload. They explore how these tools are being leveraged for data theft, financial fraud, and lateral movement within networks. With the decline of traditional malware delivery methods, including loaders and botnets, the shift toward RMMs marks a significant change in attack strategies. Tune in to learn more about this evolving threat landscape and how to stay ahead of these tactics. -
Please enjoy this encore of Word Notes.
Software users are allowed access to data or functionality contrary to the defined zero trust policy by bypassing or manipulating the installed security controls. -
As Maria is on vacation this week, our hosts â Dave Bittnerâ and â Joe Carriganâ , are sharing the latest in social engineering scams, phishing schemes, and criminal exploits that are making headlines. Joe and Dave are joined by guest Rob Allen from ThreatLocker who shares a story on how a spoofed call to the help desk unraveled into a full-blown cyber siege on MGM Resorts. Joe’s story is on a new FBI warning: scammers are impersonating the Internet Crime Complaint Center (IC3), the very site where people go to report online fraud. Dave's got the story of a so-called “Nigerian prince” scammer who turned out to be a 67-year-old man from Louisiana, now facing 269 counts of wire fraud for helping funnel money to co-conspirators in Nigeria. Our catch of the day comes from a scams subreddit, and is on a message received from the Department of Homeland Security reaching out to a user to share that they are a victim of fraud.
Resources and links to stories:
Investigating the MGM Cyberattack – How social engineering and a help desk put the whole strip at risk.
Brian Krebs LinkedIn
FBI Warns of Scammers Impersonating the IC3
IC3 2024 Report
'Nigerian prince' scammer was 67-year-old from Louisiana, police say
Have a Catch of the Day you'd like to share? Email it to us at â [email protected]â . -
Please enjoy this encore of Word Notes.
The state of a web application when it's vulnerable to attack due to an insecure configuration.
CyberWire Glossary link: â https://thecyberwire.com/glossary/owasp-security-misconfigurationâ
Audio reference link: â “What Is the Elvish Word for Friend?”â Quora, 2021. -
This week, our hosts Dave Bittner, Joe Carrigan, and Maria Varmazis (also host of the T-Minus Space Daily show) are sharing the latest in social engineering scams, phishing schemes, and criminal exploits that are making headlines. This week Joe's got some follow up about his chickens. Joe's story is on LLM-powered coding tools, and how they are increasingly hallucinating fake software package names, opening the door for attackers to upload malicious lookalike packages—a practice dubbed "slopsquatting"—that can compromise software supply chains when developers unwittingly install them. Dave’s story is on Cisco Talos uncovering a widespread toll road smishing campaign across multiple U.S. states, where financially motivated threat actors—using a smishing kit developed by “Wang Duo Yu”—impersonate toll services to steal victims' personal and payment information through spoofed domains and phishing sites. Maria's got the story of how scammers are using fake banking apps to fool sellers with phony payment screens—and walking away with thousands in goods. Our catch of the day comes from listener John who writes in to share a suspicious text message he received.
Resources and links to stories:
LLMs can't stop making up software dependencies and sabotaging everything
Unraveling the U.S. toll road smishing scams
'Scammers used fake app to steal from me in person'
Have a Catch of the Day you'd like to share? Email it to us at [email protected]. -
Please enjoy this encore episode of Word Notes.
A broad OWASP Top 10 software development category representing missing, ineffective, or unforeseen security measures.
CyberWire Glossary link: https://thecyberwire.com/glossary/owasp-insecure-design
Audio reference link: “Oceans Eleven Problem Constraints Assumptions.” by Steve Jones, YouTube, 4 November 2015. -
This week, our hosts Dave Bittner and Joe Carrigan, are sharing the latest in social engineering scams, phishing schemes, and criminal exploits that are making headlines, while our other host, Maria Varmazis is at a conference. We begin with some follow-up, as Joe reflects on the density of gold. Then, Dave shares some heartfelt and moving words about the recent passing of his father. Dave's story follows how confusion sparked by Trump's erratic tariff policies is fueling a global surge in cyber scams, phishing sites, and crypto cons, as threat actors exploit the chaos to mislead, defraud, and manipulate online users. Joe has two stories this week, the first is about the "blessing scam," a con that targets older Chinese women with promises of spiritual cleansing that ends in financial ruin. The second covers a new FTC rule requiring companies to make subscription cancellations as easy as sign-ups, cracking down on deceptive practices. Our catch of the day this week comes from MontClair University, as they are warning of a phishing scam offering a “free 2014 Airstream Sport 16′ Travel Trailer.”
Resources and links to stories:
Trump Tariff Confusion Fuels Online Scams
Oklahoma woman charged with laundering $1.5M from elderly women in online romance scam
A new ‘jackpotting’ scam has drained more than $236,000 from Texas ATMs — but who foots the loss?
Opportunity To Own A Free 2014 Airstream Sport 16′ Travel Trailer
Have a Catch of the Day you'd like to share? Email it to us at [email protected]. -
Please enjoy this encore of Word Notes.
A broad class of attack vectors, where an attacker supplies input to an applications command interpreter that results in unanticipated functionality.
CyberWire Glossary link: https://thecyberwire.com/glossary/owasp-injection
Audio reference link: “APPSEC Cali 2018 - Taking on the King: Killing Injection Vulnerabilities” YouTube Video. YouTube, March 19, 2018. -
This week, while Dave Bittner is out, Joe Carrigan, and Maria Varmazis (also host of N2K's daily space podcast, T-Minus), are sharing the latest in social engineering scams, phishing schemes, and criminal exploits that are making headlines. We start off with a lot of follow up on listener feedback this week! Justin shares a thought about how to track gold deliveries with a simple sting operation involving an AirTag. Xray Specs offers a fun response to a theory about scanning plates and running Python scripts, stating they receive similar emails despite not owning a car. Jim Gilchrist recounts his experience with E-ZPass and unpaid tolls, explaining how a failed transponder led to a replacement and noting the prevalence of scam toll messages. Joe shares two gripping stories this week, one being on how the FBI is seizing $8.2 million from a massive romance scam involving cryptocurrency, and second is on a Maryland woman losing millions in a growing "pig butchering" scheme, with the FBI warning that many more victims are at risk. Maria's story is on an East Hartford woman caught up in a federal sweepstakes scam targeting the elderly. The suspects, including one local resident, allegedly stole millions. What did they do, and how did they get caught? Our catch of the day comes from a user on Reddit who shares a message they got from billionaire, and owner of Tesla, Elon Musk.
Resources and links to stories:
FBI Cracks 'Pig Butchering' Scam on Dating Sites
Maryland woman loses millions in crypto "pig butchering" scam as FBI warns of more targets
East Hartford Woman Bilked Elderly In Fake Sweepstakes Scam: Feds
Elon Musk Vows To Hand Out $1 Million Checks This Weekend: What To Know
Have a Catch of the Day you'd like to share? Email it to us at [email protected]. -
Please enjoy this encore of Word Notes.
Code that fails to protect sensitive information.
CyberWire Glossary link: https://thecyberwire.com/glossary/owasp-cryptographic-failure
Audio reference link: Vandana Verma. “OWASP Spotlight - Project 10 - Top10.” YouTube Video. YouTube, January 4, 2021. -
This week our hosts, Dave Bittner, Joe Carrigan, and Maria Varmazis (also host of N2K's daily space podcast, T-Minus), are sharing the latest in social engineering scams, phishing schemes, and criminal exploits that are making headlines. First, we start off with some more follow-up on EZ passes, along with the newest iteration, as Kailey Cornick shares that scammers target phone numbers rather than actual toll users, sending her SUN pass scam texts tied to her old Florida number. Dave shares the story of Palo Alto's Unit 42 researchers uncovering a massive campaign distributing thousands of fraudulent cryptocurrency investment platforms via websites and mobile apps, using brand impersonation, Ponzi-like schemes, and domain fronting to deceive victims, primarily in East Africa and Asia. Maria follows the story of a Queens man arraigned for allegedly scamming a 72-year-old Newton woman out of over $480,000 by posing as a DEA agent and coercing her into transferring her assets under the threat of arrest. Joe came across a Facebook video featuring an AI-generated ad falsely claiming Kelly Clarkson endorsed a weight loss product. These deceptive ads use AI to create convincing deepfakes, making it appear as if celebrities are promoting products they’ve never actually supported. Our catch of the day comes from listener Connor, who flagged a phishing email pretending to be from the Social Security Administration. The email urges the recipient to click a link to view an "important update," but the repetition of the message and a suspicious logo placeholder suggest it's a phishing attempt designed to steal personal info.
Resources and links to stories:
Investigating Scam Crypto Investment Platforms Using Pyramid Schemes to Defraud Victims
Man Arraigned After Posing as Government Agent to Scam Senior out of Over $480,000
'I have terminal cancer and lost my life savings to whisky barrel scammers'
Casks and Kegs
Have a Catch of the Day you'd like to share? Email it to us at [email protected]. -
Enjoy this encore of Word Notes.
The prevention of the first part of an intrusion kill chain model exploitation technique, where the hacker steals valid logging credentials from a targeted victim.
CyberWire Glossary link: https://thecyberwire.com/glossary/account-takeover-prevention -
Welcome in! You’ve entered, Only Malware in the Building. Join us each month to sip tea and solve mysteries about today’s most interesting threats. Your host is Selena Larson, Proofpoint intelligence analyst and host of their podcast DISCARDED. Inspired by the residents of a building in New York’s exclusive upper west side, Selena is joined by N2K Networks Dave Bittner —and our newest totally unbiased co-host, Archy, a highly sophisticated AI robot who swears they have no ulterior motives (but we’re keeping an eye on them just in case).
Being a security researcher is a bit like being a detective: you gather clues, analyze the evidence, and consult the experts to solve the cyber puzzle. On this episode, our hosts discuss Telephone-Oriented Attack Delivery (TOAD), also known as callback phishing. In this type of attack, an attacker sends a seemingly benign email, often containing an invoice or payment notification, along with a phone number. When the victim calls, they speak with the attacker, who convinces them to install remote access tools, leading to malware installation, phishing, and financial theft. Tune in as we explore how this deceptive tactic works and ways to protect yourself from falling victim to it. - Laat meer zien