The Current Plus: AI app has ties to China, Olympians are turning to OnlyFans, 200 PC models at risk β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β In partnership with ExpressVPN | Hello, my friend, to a loaded Monday newsletter! Itβs designed to keep you tech-ahead so you wonβt be left tech-behind. Letβs see if you know which Big Tech company's unofficial motto, written into its code of conduct, used to be "Don't be evil." Was it β¦ A.) Apple, B.) Microsoft, C.) Google or D.) Amazon? Make your best guess, and youβll find the answer at the end. π Reply to this email with a (^βΏ^). Oh, the good olβ days of ASCII emojis. Today, thatβs π! Replying to my newsletter tells Google, Yahoo, Microsoft, your ISP and other biased algorithms you want my emails, and it keeps them out of your βJunkβ or βPromotionsβ folders. Let's outsmart Big Tech together! β Kim π« First-time reader? Sign up here. (Itβs free!) IN THIS ISSUE π§ββοΈ Medical fraud on the rise π± Secretly Chinese-owned π«£ Olympians on OnlyFans |
TODAY'S TOP STORY You canβt WebMD this one Youβre feeling sick, so you go to the doctor. Bad news: You need surgery. Worse news: Your insurance wonβt cover it. They say youβve already had two surgeries this year. The catch? You havenβt. This is the nasty reality of medical fraud. Iβve been beating this drum a lot lately and for good reason. This yearβs ransomware attack on Change Healthcare put 50% of all U.S. medical claims at risk. Think about that β youβre in a room with 20 people and 10 will likely get hit by medical ID theft. Hereβs what could happen if youβre one of the Americans whose medical data was exposed. Just how bad can things get? One woman realized something was wrong after she got a text from the hospital. It said her ER wait time was extended, except β¦ she wasnβt in the ER. She ignored the text, probably thinking it was just a wrong number. The next day, she got a call to discuss her test results. Thatβs when she hit the panic button. It was too late β even though she reported the incident as fraudulent, she still got slapped with a $3,600 bill. She had to escalate things to the hospitalβs privacy officer to get everything corrected. Itβs not just individuals using your medical ID; scammy organizations can steal your medical info for phantom billing schemes, too. Theyβll submit false claims for medical services you never requested and leave you with the bill. Signs and symptoms You notice the medical info in your patient record is wrong, like your blood type or a recent diagnosis. You receive a bill or an Explanation of Benefits statement for health care services you didnβt get. You start receiving calls from debt collectors about medical bills you donβt owe. Your health insurance company claims youβve hit your benefit limits when you know thatβs not true. Build up your immunity Use this searchable database to see if your health care info has been compromised. Store hard copies of medical records in a safe or lockbox. Remove prescription labels from empty bottles before you toss them. These labels have information thieves can use. Monitor your credit. You can get three free credit reports a year at AnnualCreditReport.com. Report phony medical bills. If you get bills for medical services you didnβt receive, contact your insurance provider ASAP. After, report your billing errors to the credit bureaus at IdentityTheft.gov. β This oneβs big: When hospital networks get hacked, it can keep you from getting lifesaving care. It happened already this year. Store digital copies of your medical records on your phone in case their systems go down. Hereβs how. Kids and older folks are prime targets for this stuff. Criminals bank on you not realizing thereβs a problem until theyβve stolen your health care benefits. Pass this on to people you care about using the share icons below. |
DEALS OF THE DAY π 5 awesome finds under $15 Actually, most of these deals are under $10! When there arenβt enough outlets, get more with this terrific extender. Just plug it in and youβve got five outlets, three USB outlets and one USBβC outlet, plus a surge protector and a nightlight. Itβs on sale for $12.98. Calling all athletes! Have a bunch of awards collecting dust in your office? The solution: A medal hanger. This oneβs on sale for $4.68. Itβs hot. This $7.99 fan is perfect for on the go or on your desk. Make more shower shelf space with this set of five organizers for $9.98. Need to label the kidsβ clothes but donβt want to write on the tags? Check out these no-ironing-required labels for $7.52. |
WEB WATERCOOLER π‘οΈ A win against deepfakes: The U.S. Senate unanimously passed the first bill to crack down on AI porn. The bill will let victims sue anyone who creates or distributes explicit content depicting the victims without their consent, with a 10-year statute of limitations. You know more regulations are coming. Is your car bricked? Since AT&T killed off 3G over two years ago, owners of 2014 to 2019 Volkswagens with VW CarβNet services have been in analog, so to speak. Without wireless connectivity, they no longer have features like remote start, emergency assistance or antitheft alerts. Volkswagen still doesnβt have a fix, and some 3G-reliant Hyundai and Nissan models are screwed, too. Cars with 4G should have until at least 2035. PSA: Check the connectivity specs before you buy, folks. The latest must-have for the elite? High-worth individuals are less cyber-protected than organizations, making them bigger targets. Case in point: Jeff Bezos, Elon Musk and Bill Gates have all had their phones or X accounts hacked. Now folks are paying experts big bucks to protect them from cyber threats, because, well, big money is on the line. Move over, TikTok: Talkie is now the fifth-most-downloaded app, and its parent company, MiniMax, has ties to Communist China. Talkie lets you chat with AI versions of celebs (paywall link) like Taylor Swift or a customized romantic partner. Yup, the app gets copies of everything on your phone. King Henry had two axe wives: Art historian Adam Busiakiewicz spotted a missing portrait of King Henry VIII while scrolling on X. The painting was in the background of a photo at Warwickβs Shire Hall in central England. Iβm sure it will end up at the British Museum, along with everything else stolen in the world. π Over 200 PC models are at risk: This affects millions of PCs. Secure Boot keeps your PC from booting on sketchy software but is now completely useless. Why? An employee posted the platformβs four-digit password online. Acer, Dell, Gigabyte, Intel and Supermicro PCs are all vulnerable. If youβre downloading software, use a sandbox. Iβll let you know when thereβs a patch. π
Putting the βpicsβ in Olympics: Olympians are turning to OnlyFans to make money while in Paris. Briton Jack Laugher says he only makes $36,000 a year as one of the top three divers in the world. Now, he charges $10 a month for fans to chat with him, ask questions and, of course, see some very spicy Speedo pics. |
Your ISP sees everything you do online The only way to keep it your business do that is with a VPN. A virtual private network encrypts your data and hides your IP address, giving you an extra layer of protection from snoops, advertisers and Big Tech companies looking to profit off you. Some VPNs slow your connection or, worse, track your internet activity and compromise your security. Not ExpressVPN. Plus, you can connect in just one click from a Windows PC, Mac, iPhone, Android, iPad, you name it. π¨ Deal alert: Get an extra THREE months free since you subscribe to my newsletter. Go to ExpressVPN.com/kim to try it out! β Please support our sponsors! |
TECH LIFE UPGRADE Remove Kaspersky ASAP: I recommended you delete it because itβs now banned in the U.S. over its ties to Russia. Iβve been getting a slew of people asking how to remove it, so hereβs some help. Need a replacement? My antivirus pick is TotalAV, and itβs just $19 for a year of protection on up to five devices. Upgrade for the aux: Tired of cables? This adapter lets you go wireless with CarPlay so you donβt have to clutter your console with a three-foot USB cord. Love that. Hide your Instagram Stories: If family members or coworkers follow you on IG, you might not want them to see those party vacation pics. In the app, tap your profile picture in the bottom right, then tap the three lines to the top right > Settings > Privacy > Story > Hide Story From, and select anyone you want to hide your story from. Theyβll still be able to see your profile and posts! Update Google Chrome: Crooks can easily package malicious software in password-protected zip files. Now, when youβre using Chromeβs Safe Browsing feature in Enhanced Mode, Google will ask you to share the password to scan files before you download them. Hereβs how to enable it. |
LISTEN UP | How to spot if a review is fake When youβre looking on the web for a place to stay, eat, or work, hereβs why you should think twice about online reviews. Play Now β’ 8:42 βΆ |
---|
|
BY THE NUMBERS $1.2 billion For Israelβs βIron Beamβ defense laser. The laser can take out air threats from over four miles away and never runs out of ammo (paywall link). The Iron Beam can destroy threats for about $2,000 a pop (the cost of electricity), compared to $50,000 for traditional missile defense. I hope this is on the U.S. militaryβs wishlist. 450,000 podcasts Are currently publishing new episodes. But get this: The 25 most popular podcasts account for nearly 50% of all U.S. weekly listeners. Wow, I need each and every one of you to tune into my showβs podcast. Maybe I can break into the top 100! $1 million For a starter home. Thatβs the new norm in 237 U.S. cities, up from 84 cities just five years ago. Metros in Wyoming, Colorado and Connecticut are new on the list. |
IN CASE YOU MISSED IT π» Should you splurge on an AI PC? You might want to pump the brakes. Hereβs why. $400K MIA: A woman nearly lost her down payment to this real estate scam. Itβs one of the sneakiest Iβve seen. Spray-on shoes: Theyβll debut in this yearβs Olympic marathon. The video is a mustβwatch. |
UNTIL NEXT TIME ... The answer: C.) Google. The phrase was even the WiβFi password for the shuttle that took folks to Googleβs campus. When Alphabet became Googleβs parent company in 2015, they adopted an adjusted version: βDo the right thing.β In 2018, βDonβt be evilβ disappeared from their website altogether. Speaking of β¦ A woman and a man are in a two-car accident. Both cars are demolished but neither person is hurt. After they crawl out of their cars, the woman says, "This must be a sign from God that we should meet and live for the rest of our days!β Flattered, the man replies, βOh, yes, I agree with you completely!β The woman continues, βAnd look! Another miracle β this bottle of wine didn't break. Surely God wants us to drink and celebrate our good fortune.β The man nods in agreement, opens the bottle and drinks half. He then asks, βAren't you having any?β The woman answers, βNo, Iβll just wait for the police." (I heard you laugh!) Have a great day, and Iβll be back in your inbox tomorrow with the best tech newsletter in the USA! β Kim | |
|
|