Hey listeners, Scotty here, your go-to scam buster with a techie twist and a side of snark. Picture this: you're sipping coffee at your local spot, firing up free Wi-Fi on your laptop, thinking you're golden. Boom—enter the Evil Twin, a phony hotspot set up by some shady hacker right next to the real one. Florida Attorney General Ashley Moody just dropped a scorching warning on these bad boys, as detailed by Scamicide. Scammers crank out lookalike networks like "Go0dCoffee" instead of "GoodCoffee," snagging your login creds, banking deets, or worse, turning you into an identity theft statistic. Disable auto-connect, slap on a VPN to encrypt everything, and skip financial logins on public Wi-Fi. Firewall up, antivirus fresh—don't be the easy mark.
But hold up, the scam circus is in full swing this April 2026. Over in Mongkok, Hong Kong, cops are flipping out over bogus prosecution letters stuffed with QR codes, per TVB News. Scan that puppy, and poof—your data leaks to fraudster central. Same vibe in Florida: Sheriff Carmine Marceno's blasting quishing alerts from the Lee County Sheriff's Office. Crooks slap fake QR stickers on parking meters, gas pumps, restaurant menus, even "missed delivery" tags. One zap, and you're rerouted to phishing hell, coughing up credit cards or addresses. Anthony Lie, computer security whiz, nails it—QR codes are dirt cheap for scammers but pricey for you. Rule one: if it's a sticker over legit print, bail. Type the official site manually, update your OS, and report to your bank pronto.
Now, the big fish are flopping. German authorities pinned down Russian ransomware kings Daniil Shchukin, aka UNKN, and Anatoly Kravchuk from the infamous REvil and GandCrab gangs, according to KCNet's cybersecurity roundup. These punks ran ransomware-as-a-service, hitting Kaseya, Lady Gaga's law firm, even Trump's crew—raking $2.3 million while doling $40 million in damage. REvil got smoked in 2021, but these ghosts keep haunting. Meanwhile, Microsoft's Defender team exposed AI-powered phishing exploiting OAuth flows with hyper-personalized lures and real-time codes hosted on Railway.com and Vercel. FBI's IC3 logs $20.9 billion in 2025 cyber losses, up 26%, with investment fraud and tech support scams leading the pack—seniors getting hammered hardest.
AI's the new scam steroid: deepfakes, voice cloning like DeepVoice in South Korea, where TV star Jee Seok-jin got vished, as warned by Professor Kwon Il-yong. Nebraska courts are yelling about fake traffic fine texts; SSA's battling phony COLA emails. Thailand's drowning in Line job scams.
Stay sharp, listeners—verify sources, pause before scans, use multi-factor auth everywhere. You're smarter than these pixel pirates.
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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