These websites will offer more information on protecting your computer and more.
Protect Your Computer: https://oag.ca.gov/privacy/facts/online-privacy/protect-your-computer
Have I Been Pawned? This site (https://haveibeenpwned.com/) allows you to enter an email address to see if it has been breached.
EPIC on Computer Privacy Tools: Website: https://archive.epic.org/privacy/tools.html
EPIC on Internet Privacy: Website: https://epic.org/issues/consumer-privacy/
EPIC on Web-Scraping: Website: https://epic.org/issues/consumer-privacy/web-scraping/
EPIC on Cybersecurity: Website: https://epic.org/issues/cybersecurity/
EFF on HTTPS: Website: https://www.eff.org/https-everywhere
EFF on Privacy: Website: https://www.eff.org/issues/privacy
EFF on Surveillance Self-Defense: Website: https://www.eff.org/pages/surveillance-self-defense
EFF on Browser Tracking: Website: https://www.eff.org/pages/cover-your-tracks
Spotting scams in texts or messages: https://clark.com/scams-rip-offs/avoid-text-message-scams/
Identity theft: https://clark.com/protect-your-identity/identity-theft/
Consumer Action – scam alerts, etc. https://www.consumer-action.org/
From Kim Komando:
Bogus captcha tests: Instead of picking images or typing words, these shady tests ask you to press Windows + R and Ctrl + V. Doing so then pastes in a Windows PowerShell script that unleashes Lumma Stealer malware. Stay alert: These fake captchas are popping up on random websites and in phishing emails.
1x a week = How often the National Security Agency says you should reboot your phone. Sounds like a no-brainer, but it works to combat zero-click exploits. Zero-click flaws mean a hacker can get in simply by sending you the right code.