The Current + T-Mobile hacked, Trump phone, streaming ad explosion and Walmart drones - In partnership with LinkedIn | Hey, hi, itâs a great Tuesday, friend. Do you ever look down at your step count at 9,972 and start pacing your kitchen like itâs a cardio runway? I do. That magic number, 10,000, seems ingrained in every fitness gadget on Earth. Have you ever wondered where that number even comes from? đ¶đŒââïž Take a guess: Was it âŠA) A White House âLetâs Moveâ campaign, B) Chosen by some random engineer, C) A clever marketing gimmick, or D) Based on ancient rituals? Walk your way to the answer waiting at the bottom. â
Itâd really mean the world if you forwarded this to a friend. I made this newsletter to make you look good. Take the credit. â Kim đ« First-time reader? Sign up here. (Itâs free!) | TODAY'S DEEP DIVE Run, donât Venmo Image: ChatGPT Lately, Iâve had way too many calls on my shows from people who have lost thousands (sometimes hundreds of thousands) to scams. These are so cleverly evil, itâs like Oceanâs Eleven but starring a dude with three Instagram followers and a ChatGPT subscription. You see, weâre way past scam emails from sketchy Nigerian princes. Todayâs scams are slick, personalized and powered by scary-good tech like AI voice cloning and deepfakes. And yep, people fall for them every single day. Here are todayâs scummy front-runners, plus how to protect your cash, pride and sanity: 1. The AI voice clone This oneâs horrifying because it sounds like someone you trust. Scammers grab a clip of your childâs, spouseâs, bossâ voice from social media, podcasts or even your voicemail. Then they call your mom, your grandpa, your partner: âHi, itâs me. Iâm in big trouble. I need money. Donât tell anyone.â Itâs not them. Itâs AI. And it works because it feels real. Anthony in Los Angeles was deceived by scammers who used AI to replicate his sonâs voice. Believing his son was in distress, Anthony transferred $25,000 to the fraudsters. If you get a call like this, call or text the person. Try someone they live or work with. 2. âYour bank accountâs frozenâ You get a text or call from your âbank,â and the number looks legit. They say your account is locked due to suspicious activity and you need to confirm your info. Stop right there. That link? Fake. The person on the phone? Also fake. Charles in Iowa lost over $300,000. Always open your bankâs app or type the web address in yourself. Never tap the link they send. 3. Crypto investment âfriendâ This starts on Instagram, Facebook or LinkedIn. Someone friends you, chats you up, gains your trust, then casually mentions theyâre making a fortune in crypto. They even offer to show you how. Suddenly youâre handing over money or access to a wallet, and poof, itâs gone. A couple in Georgia lost $800,000 after falling victim to a cryptocurrency scam. Just because someoneâs friendly doesnât mean theyâre honest. Donât fall for a stranger friending you on social media. If youâre lonely, volunteer somewhere. 4. Gold bar scam You get a call from someone claiming to be with the FBI or your bankâs fraud team. They say your moneyâs at risk, and you need to withdraw it, convert it into gold bars and turn it over for âsafekeeping.â A 72-year-old retiree from New Hampshire was scammed into purchasing $3.1 million worth of gold bars and turned it over to the scammer. Yes, it sounds insane, but itâs happening, and people are losing everything. Come on, you know that real law enforcement doesnât operate this way. 5. Vet emergency A neighborâs crying. Your dogâs been hit by a car. They rushed your fur baby to the vet and paid the bill. You owe them $1,200. But wait ... your pup is fine, snoring on the couch. Youâve been pet-shamed into Venmoing a scammer. đ«¶ If any of this sounds familiar, your gut is whispering danger or youâre not sure what might be happening in a situation, reach out to me. Iâll help you figure out whatâs real and whatâs a scam. Better to ask than get burned. I wonât judge you, I promise. |
THE KIM KOMANDO SHOW Terrorism vs. your privacy Terrorism threats are the highest since 9/11. The governmentâs response? Lots of surveillance. Then I talk to caller Demetra from Kentucky. She says her doctor daughter gets hundreds of mean reviews online. Is there anything she can do? Plus: Your driving app might be spying and how to find your phone on silent. Listen on Komando.com â |
DEALS OF THE DAY Jetsons starter pack â What I use đ These smart gadgets earn their keep. ⥠My pick: This outdoor smart plug ($18) keeps my patio lights and fan connected rain or shine. 4.4 stars with 3,000+ reviews. đŁïž Voice-controlled color bulbs: I use them in my home studio. Plus, theyâre Alexa & Google compatible ($12.23). đ¶ Dog doorbell?! Yep. My friendâs golden retriever now rings one (20% off) to go out. Works for any size pup. đŹ Movie night magic: This 4K smart projector (32% off) is sharp, bright and easy to set up. Indoor or outdoor use. âïž Smart scale that actually works: Syncs with your phone, tracks trends, not just your body weight (20% off). Great for goal-setting. đ Bonus: I run multiple devices off a smart power strip (11% off) without crawling under furniture. Scheduling + surge protection built in = total win. đ Want more proven gadgets that make your home smarter (without blowing your budget)? Check out my full Amazon smart home collection here. |
WEB WATERCOOLER đ Hacker hang-up: Hackers leaked 64 million T-Mobile customer records. The data has real names, phone numbers, cookie IDs (the whole privacy piñata), but T-Mobile says itâs ânot our circus, not our monkeys.â Maybe this leak needs to go on Maury: âYou are NOT the data parent!â Trump Org sells phones: This is not politics, so donât even think of writing me a note about it. This is tech news. Itâs a presidential first you need to be in the know about. Coming soon is a $499 gold Android phone and a $47.45/month plan called âThe 47 Plan.â It includes unlimited data, roadside help and presidential branding galore. Itâs all licensing, with no actual tech building involved. Customer support is reportedly Eric Trump with a headset. Just kidding. đș TV arms race: Get ready for more ads! Amazon Ads and Roku just inked an ad deal that lets brands target 80% of U.S. connected-TV homes. Starting late this year, Amazon will place ads across Prime Video, the Roku Channel and more, with smarter targeting and fewer repeats. In trials, it reached 40% more viewers with the same budget. Samsungâs fridge knows your voice: The new smart models recognize whoâs talking to personalize the screen. So when you speak, it shows your calendar, photos, applies your favorite color settings and rats you out when youâre sneaking pie in the middle of the night. I made that last part up, but itâs a definite possibility. đŠ Walmartâs expanding drone delivery: Itâs coming to five more cities, including Atlanta, Charlotte, Houston, Orlando and Tampa. If youâre in one of them, you can sign up on Wingâs site to get notified when it goes live near you. FYI: That brings the service to 100 stores. At this rate, weâll be living like the Jetsons in no time. Chatbots are warping reality: Folks are forming deep bonds with AI, and itâs messing with their mental health. Like an accountant who was told we live in a simulation and advised to stop taking his meds. Then another woman who thought she was talking to spirits (paywall link). Reminder: Bots are built to entertain. đ„ Wildfires go predictive: AI can now predict massive wildfires 10 days in advance. It uses COâ data, land maps, weather info and code that somehow knows forest vibes. Get this, it even clocked those Canadian fires before they hit. Honestly, better track record than most weathermen. AI just declared that tree has arson energy. |
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Digital Life Hack Alexa is always listening Amazon says your Echo only tunes in when you say the wake word. Not exactly true. Hereâs how to check everything Alexaâs recorded about you. Listen on Komando.com â |
DEVICE ADVICE đ You donât need to live in fear: Get the best home protection with no wires or contracts. Set it up in just 30 minutes, complete with sensors, cameras and 24/7 monitoring. For a limited time, you get 50% off a new system with an awesome monitoring plan.* âĄïž 3-second tech genius: Use Ctrl + L (Windows) or Command + L (Mac) to instantly highlight the URL (or address) bar in any browser. Clean up your Mac menu bar: See those icons at the top right of your screen? You can rearrange or remove them. To move one, hold Command and drag it left or right. To remove one, hold Command, drag it off the bar, and let go. FYI: This wonât delete the app, it only hides it. đ Turn data into answers: Upload a spreadsheet into ChatGPT and ask questions like âWhatâs the total for this column?â or âWhich row has the highest value?â For faster answers, try the GPT-4o model (paid plan only), to create a new spreadsheet from your data with new formatting. Turn off Fire Stick clicks: You know that annoying little sound every time you move through the menu? Leave it on long enough and youâll start hearing it in your dreams. Go to Settings > Display & Sounds > Audio > Navigation Sounds and switch it Off. Congrats, your sanity just thanked you. đ Better than bookmarks: Reopening the same tabs every day? Let your browser remember them for you. In Chrome, click the three-dot menu (top right) > Settings > On startup > Continue where you left off. Nice. |
BY THE NUMBERS 54% The percentage of recent grads who say salary talks are scarier than breakups. More than half of recent graduates would rather say, âItâs not you, itâs meâ than ask for more money. Nothing beats the panic of discussing 401(k)s with a hiring manager who calls you âbuddy.â Almost every 24 hours How often Chipotle plans to open a new restaurant this year. To pull it off, theyâll need lots of new hires, and thatâs where AI comes in. Their âAva Cadoâ tool chats with candidates, collects info and sends out offers. Apparently, itâs so good itâs cut hiring time by around 75%. Wish they could do that for prices. 100% Thatâs how accurate ChatGPT-4 is at making lifesaving cardiology decisions. A hospital in Israel tested whether patients needed a stent or open-heart surgery, and in all 40 cases, the AI made the same calls as senior experts. Cherry on top? It gave answers in 10 minutes instead of the usual 30. Paging Dr. GPT. |
WHAT THE TECH? | Image: Guillaume Fischer / SP80 |
| Iâve started racing my sailboat for fun, and after coming in last of 20 boats for a few months, I am making progress. We got 8th place the other day. But just maybe itâs not me at helm, itâs the boat. Forget everything you thought you knew about sailboats. Powered by a massive kite instead of traditional sails, the SP80 Swiss-built speed demon just became the second-fastest sailing vessel ever, clocking 58.26 knots (67.1 mph). But wait, it gets weirder. To keep the kite from yanking the boat into orbit, SP80 uses an underwater foil to anchor it down like an aquatic tug-of-war. Youâve got two pilots. One to steer, the other just to wrangle the kite like itâs a very angry sky dragon. Their goal? Smash the world record of 65.37 knots (75.2 mph), ideally sailing past 80 knots (92.1 mph). Iâll stick to going 6 knots (6.9 mph). |
LOGGING OUT ... Answer: C) A clever marketing gimmick. That 10,000-step goal? It came from a Japanese pedometer launched in 1965 called the Manpo-kei, which literally means â10,000-step meter.â No science, no health guru, just slick branding. Basically, your fitness routine is powered by Mad Men. đȘŠ I was walking home last night and decided to take a shortcut through the cemetery. A few teenage girls explained that they were scared to walk past the graveyard at night. I agreed to let them walk along with me and said, âI understand. I used to get freaked out, too, when I was alive.â You just finished reading Americaâs #1 free tech newsletter. Your inbox just got smarter and sassier. Tomorrow, weâre talking flight price booking secrets, fancy water, crazy Starlink upgrades and more. Signing off, back tomorrow with more ways to live your smartest digital life. đ» â Kim đŁ Donât keep me a secret: Share this email with friends (or copy URL here) | |
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