To our valued KnowBe4 customers, partners, and community. I wanted to share some exciting developments happening at KnowBe4.
To our valued KnowBe4 customers, partners, and community. I wanted to share some exciting developments happening at KnowBe4.
Email is still the most common attack vector for cyber threats, according to a new report from Barracuda.
Recently, I covered a T-Mobile scam where a friend of mine narrowly avoided losing money. In that scam, the attackers called up pretending to be from T-Mobile offering him a cannot-pass-up 30% discount on future T-Mobile bills.
Cyberwire wrote: “WIRED has published a report on North Korea’s efforts to obtain remote IT positions at foreign companies, noting that these fraudulent workers are now using AI tools to cheat on coding tests and technical interviews. The threat actors are also using deepfake technology to bypass ID checks. The primary goal of these workers is to earn a paycheck for Pyongyang, though they also occasionally use their access to conduct espionage or launch financially motivated attacks.
The number of infostealers delivered via phishing emails increased by 84% last year, according to a new report from IBM’s X-Force researchers. Threat actors are using these malware strains to steal credentials for use in follow-on attacks.
A friend of mine got a call on his phone and he regrettably picked it up. The number was 267-332-3644. The area code is from Bucks County, PA, where he used to live many years ago.
Researchers at INKY warn that criminals are impersonating the US Department of Homeland Security to launch phishing scams.
Ever since Microsoft’s initial announcement on February 13, 2025, about a Russian nation-state phishing campaign using “device code phishing,” many people have been wondering what it is.
This post will tell you what device code phishing is and how to defend against it.