According to the FBI, online marketing scams cost Americans $10 billion in 2022, and now those scams are migrating to the place many of us spend the most time: our smartphones. But now there are steps you can take to make your phone spam-proof.
We've already got the warning about sharing photos of your COVID-19 vaccination card, but now the FBI is warning the public not to make or buy fake ones.
As if the Boston bombings aren't enough for the nation to deal with, we had the letters mailed to President Obama and Sen. Roger Wicker that contained the poison ricin. There is breaking news in the arrest in the ricin scare.
Whenever tragedy strikes, a lot of information is put out there and some of it is not true. Earlier today there was a report of an arrest in relation to the bombings in Boston, but the Feds are claiming that isn't true.
A man drove from Long Island, New York, into Lower Manhattan earlier today in a van he thought was filled with explosives. He parked the van close to the Federal Reserve building, just a few blocks from the World Trade Center, and planned to detonate it using a cell phone from a nearby hotel.
The explosives, however, were fake.
When I was growing up, it was always the joke. I know where Jimmy Hoffa is buried. My uncles joked a lot. When I was sent to find something, they would say, did you find Jimmy Hoffa?
The FBI recently made a bust of a company that was using malware to make your computer visit certain web sites. After further investigating they found that close to 300,000 computer may crash on Monday because of this viral malware. Here's how you can fix it.