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Latest coverage for Fake

Stay informed on the latest threats with our articles on fake information security tactics, including scams, phishing attempts, and fake news in cybersecurity.

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Background for this topic.

Fake is a broad term that encapsulates any fraudulent or inauthentic representation within the digital realm. In the context of information security, "fake" often applies to a variety of deceptive practices designed to mislead, manipulate or harm individuals and organizations. These practices can include the creation of fake websites that mimic legitimate ones to harvest sensitive user data, spoofed emails impersonating trusted entities, and counterfeit software that may contain malicious code.

Moreover, the issue of fake news is also pertinent, where fabricated information is spread with the intent to deceive or cause public harm. This can have serious implications for cyber security as it can influence user behavior and potentially lead to security breaches. Other instances involve deepfakes, which are convincingly altered videos or audio recordings, and can undermine personal and professional reputacies, and can be used in targeted phishing campaigns.

In essence, anything fake within the context of information security is a concern because it undermines trust in digital communication, affects the integrity of data, and poses risks to the privacy and security of individuals and businesses alike.

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Showing 6 most recent headlines Filtered view

Every time you think the industry has finally stopped doing some reckless, low-effort crap, somebody spins up a fresh box full of sketchy loaders, fake installers, recycled social-engineering bait, and enough exposed infrastructure to make you wonder if prod is just a public beta now - meanwhile some researcher casually drops a technique that turns a "minor" foothold into total account

Monday opens with a trust problem. A mail server flaw is under active use. A network control system was targeted. Trusted packages were poisoned. A fake model page pushed a stealer. Then came the familiar ransom claim: the data was returned and deleted

The internet is noisy this week. We are seeing some wild new tactics, like people using fake cell towers to send scam texts, while some developers are accidentally downloading tools that peek into their private files during a simple install. It is definitely a busy time to be online

Everything is dumb again. This week feels broken in a very familiar way. Old tricks are back. New tools are doing shady crap. Supply chains got hit. Fake help desks worked. Weird research showed how easy some attacks still are