ThreatsDay Bulletin: $15B Crypto Bust, Satellite Spying, Billion-Dollar Smishing, Android RATs & More

The online world is changing fast. Every week, new scams, hacks, and tricks show how easy it’s become to turn everyday technology into a weapon. Tools made to help us work, connect, and stay safe are now being used to steal, spy, and deceive. Hackers don’t always break systems anymore — they use them. They hide inside trusted apps, copy real websites, and trick people into giving up control

The online world is changing fast. Every week, new scams, hacks, and tricks show how easy it’s become to turn everyday technology into a weapon. Tools made to help us work, connect, and stay safe are now being used to steal, spy, and deceive.

Hackers don’t always break systems anymore — they use them. They hide inside trusted apps, copy real websites, and trick people into giving up control without even knowing it. It’s no longer just about stealing data — it’s about power, money, and control over how people live and communicate.

This week’s ThreatsDay issue looks at how that battle is unfolding — where criminals are getting smarter, where defenses are failing, and what that means for anyone living in a connected world.

The line between safe and exposed online is thinner than ever. What used to be rare, complex attacks are now everyday events, run by organized groups who treat cybercrime like a business. It’s no longer just about protecting devices — it’s about protecting people, trust, and truth in a digital world that never stops moving.

Staying secure doesn’t mean chasing every headline. It means understanding how these threats work, paying attention to the small signs, and not letting convenience replace caution. The same tools that make life easier can turn against us — but awareness is still the best defense.

Stay alert, stay curious, and don’t assume safety — build it.

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 The Hacker News 

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