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Signal says UK plan to scan devices for nude images 'endangers us all'
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The Register - Security
- Chrome's zero-day Whac-A-Mole continues with fifth exploited bug of the year
Chrome's zero-day Whac-A-Mole continues with fifth exploited bug of the year
Cisco SASE with Meraki: Get in the Fast Lane to SASE
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McAfee Blogs
- New Research: Rising Costs Are Driving Consumers to Ignore Scam Instincts for Better Deals
New Research: Rising Costs Are Driving Consumers to Ignore Scam Instincts for Better Deals
Most people don’t get scammed because they ignore warning signs.
They get scammed because they find a reason to explain those warning signs away.
The website looks a little off, but the deal is incredible. The text message is unexpected, but they’re already waiting for a package. The seller is unfamiliar, but the discount is too good to pass up.
That’s what makes major shopping events such fertile ground for scammers.
New McAfee research suggests that economic pressure may be making that problem worse, as 40% of consumers say they would trust a lower priced deal without verifying it. That means as costs are climbing, shoppers are less likely to second guess a too-good-to-be-true deal that could be a scam.
“Anyone who has ever fallen for a scam thought they would recognize one first,” McAfee’s Head of Threat Research Abhishek Karnik reminds shoppers.
“That confidence is part of what scammers count on,” he says. “Tools like McAfee exist precisely for those moments, flagging suspicious links, messages, and offers in real time, before a split-second decision becomes a costly one.”
New McAfee Research Reveals the Cost of Deal Hunting
While most shoppers believe they can spot a scam, McAfee’s new research suggests many are engaging in behaviors that increase their risk.
Rising Prices Are Driving Riskier Shopping Decisions
Economic pressure is changing how people shop online.
McAfee found:
- 82% prioritize finding the cheapest deal when shopping online
- 55% spend more time hunting for deals
- 40% would trust a lower-priced deal without verifying it first
- 29% would skip researching a seller if the deal seemed especially good
- 27% are more likely to consider unfamiliar sellers because of lower prices
- 23% feel pressure to act quickly before deals disappear
The same behaviors that help shoppers find bargains can also make them more vulnerable to fraud.
“What the data reflects is that economic pressure has effectively done some of the scammer’s work for them,” says Karnik. “When consumers are already primed to move quickly and prioritize price over authenticity, it takes far less effort to push them toward a bad click or a fraudulent purchase.”
Shopping Scams Are Already Costing Americans Real Money
The financial impact is significant:
- 37% say they have lost money due to online shopping scams or fraud
- 45% of victims lost more than $100
- 25% lost between $100 and $499
- 20% lost $500 or more
- 36% were unable to recover any of their money
AI Is Making Shopping Scams Harder to Spot
Consumers are increasingly aware that artificial intelligence is changing the scam landscape.
According to McAfee research:
- 70% agree AI-generated content is making shopping scams harder to identify
- Nearly three-quarters have encountered shopping content they believed was suspicious or AI-generated
“The signs people have historically relied on, poor grammar, low-quality images, obviously off branding, are no longer reliable,” advises Karnik. “AI has lowered the production cost of a convincing fake to nearly zero.”
It’s not just a fake landing page fraudsters are creating.
“AI is being used to make fake review sections, impersonation messages that look exactly like it came from a major retailer, realistic logos, believable URLS,” Karnik says. “When you’re shopping online, you need to adjust your expectations to match that new AI reality.”
What Are the Most Common Shopping Scams During Major Sales Events?
Scammers follow consumer attention.
Whenever millions of people are searching for deals at the same time, scammers create fake websites, impersonate retailers and delivery companies, and use urgency to pressure shoppers into acting before they think.
Here are some of the most common shopping scams consumers encounter during major sales events, as well as the red flags consumers can watch for:
| Scam Type | How It Works | Red Flags |
| Fake shopping websites | Fraudulent websites mimic real retailers and disappear after collecting payments | Prices far below competitors, little company information, newly created websites |
| Fake social media ads | Ads promote products that never arrive or are counterfeit | Too-good-to-be-true discounts, limited reviews, unfamiliar brands |
| Delivery notification scams | Fake package alerts claim there is an issue with your shipment | Unexpected texts, suspicious links, requests for payment |
| Retailer impersonation scams | Messages claim there is a problem with your account or order | Urgent language, login requests, unfamiliar sender addresses |
| QR code scams | QR codes redirect shoppers to fraudulent websites | Codes placed on flyers, posters, packages, or public locations |
| Brushing scams | Unsolicited packages arrive at your home | Items you never ordered, requests to scan codes or leave reviews |
| Fake recall scams | Messages claim a recent purchase has been recalled | Requests for payment, account credentials, or personal information |
According to McAfee research, consumers most commonly report encountering fake shipping notifications, delivery scams, retailer impersonation scams, account alerts, and suspicious discount offers during major shopping periods.
How McAfee Can Help
With McAfee+ Premium, multiple layers work together before any damage is done:
- Scam Detector flags suspicious texts, emails, links, QR codes, and even deepfake videos before you engage
- Secure VPN keeps your data private, especially on public Wi-Fi
- Web Protection helps block risky sites, even if you do accidentally click helps block risky sites, even if you do accidentally click
- Password Manager doesn’t just help you make unique, strong passwords, it keeps them stored and organized for you
- Device Security helps detect malicious apps or downloads
- Identity Monitoring alerts you if your personal info shows up where it should not, so you can act fast
- Personal Data Cleanup helps remove your information from sites selling it.
- Online Account Cleanup assists in taking down your old, forgotten accounts across the web
- Social Privacy Manager helps you monitor and change privacy settings across your social platforms in just a few clicks
Together, these protections are designed to address the broader range of online risks people face every day.
Plus, click here to get McAfee’s limited-time deals on real-time protection this Amazon Prime Day, from June 23 to June 26.
About our consumer research
McAfee surveyed 1,000 U.S. adults in May 2026 as part of a broader study of 5,000 respondents across the U.S., UK, France, Germany, and Japan, focused on online shopping intentions, scam awareness, and purchase behaviors.
The post New Research: Rising Costs Are Driving Consumers to Ignore Scam Instincts for Better Deals appeared first on McAfee Blog.
France probes compromise of gov messaging platform after account hijack
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The Register - Security
- Norks blast 250+ fake job offers to developers over 6 weeks to try and snarf creds and crypto
Norks blast 250+ fake job offers to developers over 6 weeks to try and snarf creds and crypto
Meta Deletes Face-Recognition System From Its Smart Glasses App After WIRED Report
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The Register - Security
- GitHub nukes 70+ Microsoft repos, breaks CI/CD pipelines, following suspected worm infections
GitHub nukes 70+ Microsoft repos, breaks CI/CD pipelines, following suspected worm infections
NSO Group back in Meta's crosshairs after alleged WhatsApp targeting
All the Ways Europe Is Ditching American Technology
Crypto-Funded Chinese Peptide Labs Are Booming
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The Register - Security
- Oxford Uni student data pwned yet again - this time via career platform breach
Oxford Uni student data pwned yet again - this time via career platform breach
Yet another Cisco SD-WAN 0-day under attack, and no patch in sight
GTA Cheat Users Exposed in Breach as Minecraft Malware Hits 116,000 Players
One gaming cyberattack this week exposed nearly 64,000 users.
Another has already infected more than 116,000 players.
Both are connected by the same common gaming behavior: looking for a cheat, mod, or shortcut.
This week in scam news, a popular Grand Theft Auto V cheat service was hacked, exposing tens of thousands of users. At the same time, McAfee researchers uncovered a massive malware campaign spreading through fake Minecraft mods, cheats, and game clients.
The takeaway is simple: some of the biggest threats facing gamers aren’t happening inside games. They’re hiding in the downloads, websites, and tools players use around them.
Let’s start with the GTA breach.
GTA Cheat Service Breach Exposes Nearly 64,000 Users
Atlas Menu, a cheat service for Grand Theft Auto V, was reportedly hacked, exposing data belonging to nearly 64,000 users.
According to reports, the leaked information included:
- Email addresses
- Usernames
- Scrambled passwords
- IP addresses
- Customer support tickets
The hacker who claimed responsibility later posted the data online.
Why This Matters
Many players think of cheats as harmless tools that unlock special abilities, provide advantages, or simply make games more entertaining.
But unofficial cheat services often operate outside the protections offered by legitimate gaming platforms.
That means users may be:
- Sharing personal information with unknown developers
- Downloading unverified software
- Exposing themselves to malware
- Putting gaming accounts at risk
And that brings us to an even bigger threat.
Minecraft Malware Campaign Has Already Infected 116,000 Players
McAfee researchers recently uncovered a large-scale malware operation targeting gamers searching for Minecraft mods, clients, and cheats.
The campaign is called WeedHack.
What Is WeedHack?
WeedHack is a type of Malware-as-a-Service (MaaS).
That means cybercriminals package malware into a subscription service that other attackers can use.
Researchers found that:
- More than 116,000 victims have been infected since January
- The campaign continues to add roughly 2,000 to 3,000 new victims every day
- More than 3,800 malicious files have been identified
- More than 240 malicious download URLs have been linked to the operation
Premium versions reportedly cost as little as $5 per month and include tools that allow attackers to remotely access victims’ devices and webcams.
What WeedHack Can Steal
Once installed, the malware can collect:
- Minecraft account credentials and session IDs
- Discord, Steam, and Telegram credentials
- Browser passwords and cookies
- Cryptocurrency wallet information
- Screenshots and device information
- Files stored on a victim’s computer
Premium versions can also provide:
- Live webcam access
- Live screen sharing
- Remote keyboard and mouse control
- Keylogging capabilities
- Full remote access to the infected device
How McAfee+ Advanced Helps Protect Gamers
Gaming malware campaigns rely on three things:
- Getting users to visit malicious websites
- Convincing them to download infected files
- Encouraging them to ignore security warnings
With McAfee+ Advanced, multiple layers work together before any damage is done:
- Scam Detector flags suspicious texts, emails, links, QR codes, and even deepfake videos before you engage
- Secure VPN keeps your data private, especially on public Wi-Fi
- Web Protection helps block risky sites, even if you do accidentally click helps block risky sites, even if you do accidentally click
- Password Manager doesn’t just help you make unique, strong passwords, it keeps them stored and organized for you
- Device Security helps detect malicious apps or downloads
- Identity Monitoring alerts you if your personal info shows up where it should not, so you can act fast
- Personal Data Cleanup helps remove your information from sites selling it.
- Online Account Cleanup assists in taking down your old, forgotten accounts across the web
- Social Privacy Manager helps you monitor and change privacy settings across your social platforms in just a few clicks
Together, these protections are designed to address the broader range of online risks people face every day.
Other Scam and Cybersecurity News This Week
Here are some other important headlines to be aware of:
Carnival Data Breach Impacts Nearly 6 Million Customers
Carnival Corporation disclosed a data breach affecting nearly six million customers after a social engineering attack allowed an unauthorized individual to gain access to part of the company’s IT systems.
Exposed information may include:
- Names
- Addresses
- Email addresses
- Phone numbers
- Dates of birth
- Government-issued identification numbers
Affected customers should be alert for phishing emails, fake customer support calls, and identity theft attempts.
Instagram AI Support Tool Exploit Raises Security Questions
Instagram says it has fixed an issue that reportedly allowed attackers to manipulate its AI-powered support chatbot and gain access to other users’ accounts.
According to reports, attackers were allegedly able to influence the account recovery process and associate new email addresses with targeted accounts.
The incident highlights a growing challenge for AI-powered customer support systems: convenience cannot come at the expense of identity verification.
AI Voice Cloning Scams Continue to Surge
Voice cloning scams continue to grow as AI tools make it easier than ever to imitate friends, family members, and coworkers.
According to FBI data cited this week, Americans lost more than $893 million to AI-related scams last year.
These scams included:
- Voice cloning attacks
- AI-generated phishing emails
- Romance scams
- Other AI-assisted fraud schemes
If someone calls claiming to be a loved one in distress and urgently requests money, verify the situation through another communication channel before taking action.
McAfee Safety Tips This Week
Whether you’re downloading a Minecraft mod or answering an unexpected phone call, the same rule applies:
Slow down before you click, download, or share information.
Here are a few ways to stay safer:
- Download mods, clients, and game tools only from trusted sources.
- Be skeptical of download links shared in YouTube comments, Discord servers, or social media posts.
- Never disable antivirus software to install a game mod.
- Enable multi-factor authentication on gaming, Discord, and email accounts.
- Use unique passwords for gaming accounts.
- Treat “free cheats,” exclusive hacks, and too-good-to-be-true downloads with caution.
We’ll be back next week with more scams making headlines.
The post GTA Cheat Users Exposed in Breach as Minecraft Malware Hits 116,000 Players appeared first on McAfee Blog.
World Food Programme breach exposes data of 600k vulnerable Gazan families
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The Register - Security
- Council in UK's City of York outs hundreds of disabled residents with a single email blunder
Council in UK's City of York outs hundreds of disabled residents with a single email blunder
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The Register - Security
- OpenAI's agent chained decade-old DoS attacks to crash web servers in seconds
OpenAI's agent chained decade-old DoS attacks to crash web servers in seconds
Meta Silently Added Face-Recognition Code for Its Smart Glasses to Millions of Phones
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The Register - Security
- Five Eyes: Watch out for odd LinkedIn connection requests, China's back on the hunt for state secrets
Five Eyes: Watch out for odd LinkedIn connection requests, China's back on the hunt for state secrets