Online fraud stories
Job seekers are being lured into fake FIFA hiring pages that harvest credentials and could expose work accounts to wider corporate breaches.
Households and businesses could be spared more fraud losses as banks, telcos and platforms widen checks and scam-blocking codes.
More than 65 per cent of Infoblox customers were found querying domains linked to residential proxy networks, widening risks for defenders.
Attackers are using fake World Cup sites and messaging apps to steal credentials, with some scams now aimed at event suppliers and staff.
Access to AI research and software is drawing state-backed and criminal attacks, with technology firms now the world's most targeted sector.
Customers can now access advice on branded web domains as phishing and impersonation risks push more firms to tighten online controls.
Fans and jobseekers are being targeted by a growing wave of fake ticket, travel and recruitment scams ahead of the tournament.
Players must pick out a mule hidden in crowded scenes as banks face rising pressure to curb fraud and recruit awareness.
Oxford Information Labs says cross-border scam probes could improve as the upgraded platform draws on about 28 million signals across ASEAN.
The funding comes as tighter regulation and AI-driven fraud push more online businesses to add identity checks across products and markets.
UK businesses face more mobile phishing and fraud as Zimperium widens access to its defences through ABC Distribution.
Phone-based fraud is forcing employers to train staff more aggressively as vishing losses rise and call scams spread across Australia.
Most Australian fans would still join venue-named hotspots, leaving match-day travellers exposed to phishing, fake streams and account theft.
End-of-financial-year deadlines are giving criminals a timely opening to steal credentials and financial data from Australians, Proofpoint says.
The pact aims to curb counterfeit sales across major marketplaces by using shared intelligence and AI checks before listings go live.
Wealthy households face a rising risk of theft and fraud as attackers mine social media, smart devices and public profiles for easy entry points.
UK businesses are treating domain names as trust markers as 65% of respondents said they trust AI-recommended sites more than search results.
Victims in the UK lost GBP £106 million last year as fraudsters use AI, private messaging and emotional pressure to extract cash.
Charities, small firms and fraud victims across Scotland got more than GBP £3 million in cyber support as the centre reinvested profits.
Fraudsters are reaching young people on social media before any payment is made, Ecommpay said, urging tougher platform accountability.