Hey listeners, Scotty here, your go-to scam buster with a techie twist on the wild world of cyber crooks. Picture this: you're clicking through an online checkout, card details flying, when sneaky Magecart skimmers—those JavaScript vampires from Malwarebytes reports—suck up your American Express, Mastercard, or Discover data right from major payment networks like AmEx and Diners Club. This campaign's been lurking since 2022, exploiting e-commerce weak spots, so shop owners, patch your CMS now, and you, grab Malwarebytes Browser Guard to block those malicious scripts before they feast.
Speaking of long cons, Ponzi kingpin Renwick Haddow's sentencing just got bumped from January 28 to April 29 by the New York Southern District Court, per FX News Group. This guy's been cooperating from Morocco and the Bahamas, liquidating assets from his Bitcoin Store and Bar Works scams that fleeced investors since 2014 with fake crypto platforms and co-working hype. Arrested back in 2017, he's still dodging the slam while victims wait—classic delay tactic.
Over in King County, Washington, scammers are posing as deputies from the Sheriff's Office, blasting calls about missed jury duty and fake arrest warrants, as KIRO7 exposed. Sergeant Val Kelly warns they'll demand instant phone payments or threaten cuffs—total BS. Real cops don't call for cash like that; hang up, hit the non-emergency line, and check socials for alerts. Snohomish County's seeing it too.
AARP Pennsylvania's fraud squad, via PR Newswire on January 13, flags five 2026 nasties hitting seniors hard: phony employment gigs demanding fees, recovery scams charging to "fix" prior rip-offs, digital arrest video terrors, "Hello pervert" blackmail emails, and romance hustles pushing crypto. Losses for 60-plus folks hit $445 million in 2024 alone, and AI's making 'em slicker.
Then there's the massive 2026 breach dumping passwords from big tech platforms, screaming PCMatic's wake-up: ditch password recycling now. Hackers shotgun stolen creds from Netflix to your bank—stop 'em with unique 12+ char beasts in a password manager, crank on multi-factor auth everywhere, scan browser saves with Google's Password Checkup, and freeze your credit.
In Denver, the city government's blasting warnings about fake rezoning fee emails from bogus denvergov@usa.com addresses, as their Tech Services confirmed January 13. Chief Info Sec Officer Merlin Namuth says pause on urgency—verify first.
Listeners, arm up: unique passwords, 2FA like a digital moat, sniff phishing by spotting urgent threats or bad grammar, overshare nothing online, and research investments via FCA registers. Update apps, buy tickets from STAR-approved spots, monitor statements. Scammers evolve, but you're the boss—stay vigilant, breathe, verify.
Thanks for tuning in, smash that subscribe button for more scam-smashing tips. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai.
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This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
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