Activity
Mon
Wed
Fri
Sun
Jan
Feb
Mar
Apr
May
Jun
Jul
Aug
Sep
Oct
Nov
What is this?
Less
More

Memberships

Learn Online Security

34 members • Free

14 contributions to Learn Online Security
What's one thing you did today to keep yourself safe?
I'll start 😊 Today I let a suspicious call go to voicemail. I used to always answer my phone. Now, I am trying to get in the habit of letting it ring.
What's one thing you did today to keep yourself safe?
2 likes • 4d
The nature of my job make not answering calls from unknown numbers potentially a business losing decision, so that really is not an option. I get calls from unknown numbers on a regular basis. So I just have to be extra aware when getting calls. Recently I have been getting calls to my personal number supposedly from my cell phone carrier. They were making an offer too good to be true, and it was. They asked my a security question, and when I pushed back on it a bit, shouldn't you have that information, click.
There is a shark in the water...^...
One problem with constantly focusing on security issues is that we become a negative voice. Every post is, "watch out for this", "these people are coming after you". I recently spoke with another podcast host who has the same problem. We decided that some, maybe not all, of the topics can be covered with a focus on hope or self-improvement vs. "the sky is falling". The other problem is that doom-and-gloom content gets more views. I would rather provide you with hope and a lifeboat than a finger pointing at a shark. What do you think?
2 likes • 9d
I guess I see things different. Where some people are seeing doom and gloom, I was seeing hope. Yes, many of the topics focused on the negative, but it's not just here is a negative, deal with it. It is here is a negative, but also hear are some tips and ideas how to deal with it. So, yes, there is a bad thing, but there is a way to stop it!
2 likes • 10d
It depends on the scam really. If it is a personal scam (phone call/email) I think it is mostly people not understanding, often tech, but it could be other things. Which is why seniors are the number one targeted demographic for these kinds of scams. If it is targeting a business, I think they are relying on people not really caring. It is just a job, they don't treat me good, so why should I care, etc. Another reason for companies to treat there staff well. If people actually care about there jobs, and/or their work and the people around them, they would be more cautious. Not that they are willingly allowing it to happen, just that they don't care enough to have proper alertness.
Scammers don’t just steal passwords — they steal trust.
Think back: what’s the sneakiest trick you’ve seen someone use to gain trust quickly? Drop it in the comments 👇 Let’s learn from each other’s experiences so fewer people get fooled.
Scammers don’t just steal passwords — they steal trust.
3 likes • Oct 9
@Tim Stewart I had my Facebook hacked once too. A friend called me, and asked if I was in England, and lost passport and wallet, and needed money. She was pretty sure of the answer before asking it, and she was right. While I was not home, I was nowhere near Europe. I got my wife to post about the scam, as I did with my friend who called me (lots of mutual friends for both, but not all). Took a while to get my FB back up and running. Nobody fell for it though. :)
3 likes • 15d
@Leta Cross-Gray I know for Facebook there is, to an extent. You can ask for it to be memorialized. And a person can have a legacy contact set up, which will give the person control of the memorialized account. If they did not, the account will be memorialized, and the account can not be changed. You can also request an account be deleted. Both of these would require proof of death. I expect Instagram would be similar, since it is the same company. Not sure about the rest of social media, thought I would think there was something.
De-cluttering is all the rage.
What happens when that impromptu 10-minute power clean turns into a data breach? When it comes to business security, most owners focus on software, firewalls, and encryption. But one often-overlooked risk lies in how people handle devices at the end of their life—from old laptops and phones to printers and fax machines. Every device that stores or transmits information is a potential leak point, and the human factor plays a critical role in keeping that data safe. What device were you surprised to learn was a potential security risk?
2 likes • 23d
@Brayden S While it makes perfect sense, I have to admit, I never thought of those either.
1-10 of 14
David Harborne
3
23points to level up
@david-harborne-2597
Sales Manager at Bankert Marketing Inc.

Active 1d ago
Joined Sep 9, 2025