"AI can make mistakes" may not be a good enough legal defense for defamatory or incorrect AI Overviews.
British bank Lloyds has revealed that Meta platforms account for over two-thirds of fraud reports made by their customers.
Few people have benefited from AI more than scammers.
Short-form video platforms like TikTok and Instagram Reels are the latest places cybercriminals are spreading malware.
Microsoft just dropped the biggest Patch Tuesday in 23 years.
https://www.malwarebytes.com/blog/bugs/2026/06/microsofts-biggest-ever-patch-tuesday-fixes-206-bugs-including-3-zero-days?utm_campaign=brandsocial&utm_medium=social&utm_source=bluesky
The next generation of scams won't look suspicious. They'll look real.
Our research reveals a growing trust crisis. Nearly 9 in 10 can no longer tell what’s real from AI, while 50% have encountered an AI-driven scam.
As AI reshapes trust, the burden of telling what's real falls on human beings.
Apple has strengthened its Stolen Device Protection feature, making it harder for thieves to change security settings, factory‑reset a stolen iPhone, or set it up as new.
‼️ Chrome users, update now ‼️
Google has issued updates for the Chrome browser, patching a number of high‑severity vulnerabilities, including one that is being actively exploited in the wild.
Meta quietly included inactive face-recognition code in its smart glasses app, sparking concern that even unused biometric features on millions of devices could enable non-consensual identification.
Read the full report.
www.malwarebytes.com/ai-scams
Facebook, Instagram, and WhatsApp account for more than two thirds of fraud reports made by Lloyds customers.
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Deepfakes, voice cloning, and other AI-powered scams cost Americans nearly $900 million in 2025, says the 2025 FBI Internet Crime Report.