8776363957
Connect with us:
LinkedIn link
Facebook link
Twitter link
YouTube link
Gigabit Systems logo
Link to home
Who We AreManaged ServicesCybersecurityOur ProcessContact UsPartners
The Latest News in IT and Cybersecurity

News

A cloud made of diagonal linesA cloud made of diagonal lines
A pattern of hexagons to resemble a network.
Cybersecurity
Tips
News
Must-Read

Your Business Can Disappear With One Click

April 28, 2026
•
20 min read

Your Business Can Disappear With One Click

Meta Is Locking Accounts at Scale

March to April 2026 saw another wave of Facebook and Instagram account suspensions.

Thousands of users.
No clear explanations.
Appeals denied within hours.

The pattern is consistent:

  • Account suspended without detail

  • Appeal rejected almost instantly

  • No path for escalation

And in many cases, the trigger appears to be automated moderation.

The Real Risk: It’s Not Just Personal

Most people think this is a personal account issue.

It is not.

If your personal profile is tied to business assets, everything connected to it is exposed:

  • Business Manager access

  • Ad accounts

  • Pixels and tracking data

  • Audiences and campaign history

Lose the profile, lose the infrastructure.

No malware. No breach.

Just access removed.

This Is a Single Point of Failure

Many businesses unknowingly build their entire marketing stack on one identity.

One login controls:

  • Campaigns

  • Spend

  • Analytics

  • Historical data

That is not a growth strategy.

That is a risk.

Why This Is Happening

At scale, platforms rely on automated systems to detect abuse.

Those systems are fast.

They are not always accurate.

When automation is wrong, there is often no human layer to correct it quickly.

That is the gap.

Where This Hits Hardest

  • SMBs running ads through a single owner account

  • Agencies managing multiple clients from one profile

  • E-commerce brands dependent on Meta traffic

  • Any business without redundancy in access

If your business depends on Meta, this is operational risk.

What You Should Do Right Now

1. Remove Single-User Dependency

No business asset should rely on one personal profile.

2. Add Redundant Admin Access

  • At least two admins on every Business Manager

  • Separate identities, not shared logins

3. Audit Access Across Everything

Know exactly:

  • Who has access

  • What they control

  • What breaks if they disappear

4. Separate Personal and Business Risk

Where possible:

  • Use Business Manager properly

  • Avoid tying critical assets to a single identity

  • Document recovery paths

The Bigger Lesson

This is not just a Meta issue.

It is a modern platform risk.

You do not own the systems you depend on.

Access is your lifeline.

And access can be removed instantly.

Bottom Line

Cybersecurity is not always about attackers.

Sometimes the biggest risk is losing control of your own accounts.

If one profile going down takes your business with it, you do not have a security strategy.

You have a dependency.

70% of all cyber attacks target small businesses, I can help protect yours.

#CyberSecurity #SMBSecurity #DigitalRisk #DataProtection #BusinessContinuity


.

Cybersecurity
Technology

Hackers Don’t Break In. They Sign In.

April 23, 2026
•
20 min read

Hackers Don’t Break In. They Sign In.

What the 2026 Threat Landscape Actually Looks Like

Cybersecurity has changed.

The old model was simple. Attackers forced their way in using malware.

That model is fading.

Today’s attackers log in like employees.

And the latest global threat data shows this shift is not slowing down. It is accelerating.

The Biggest Shift: Trust Is the Attack Surface

Here is what matters:

  • 82% of attacks are now malware-free

  • 35% of cloud attacks use valid accounts

  • Most intrusions rely on legitimate systems

There are no virus alerts.

No obvious warning signs.

No moment where something clearly looks wrong.

Attackers are using:

  • Stolen passwords

  • MFA fatigue attacks

  • Approved apps and integrations

  • Internal tools like PowerShell, RMM platforms, and SaaS systems

They look normal because they are using your systems exactly as designed.

Speed Has Changed the Game

Response time is collapsing.

  • 29 minutes average breakout time

  • 27 seconds fastest observed attack

  • Under 4 minutes for data exfiltration

If your strategy is to “notice and react,” you are already behind.

AI Is Accelerating the Threat

AI is not just a business tool.

It is an attacker advantage.

  • 89% increase in AI-driven attacks year over year

Attackers are using AI for:

  • Phishing emails that sound real

  • Fake job applicants and identities

  • Automated reconnaissance

  • Script and payload generation

This lowers the barrier.

Less skilled attackers now operate at a high level.

More attacks. Faster execution. Harder detection.

The Rise of Malware-Free Attacks

This is where most businesses fall behind.

Attackers do not need malware anymore.

They:

  • Log in with stolen credentials

  • Move laterally using built-in tools

  • Access email, backups, and cloud storage

  • Exfiltrate data or deploy ransomware quietly

No antivirus alert.

No pop-up warning.

Just impact.

Where They Are Getting In

1. Identity (Primary Entry Point)

  • Weak or reused passwords

  • No MFA or poorly configured MFA

  • Compromised Microsoft 365 or Google Workspace accounts

2. Edge Devices

  • Firewalls

  • VPNs

  • Routers

New vulnerabilities are weaponized within days.

3. Cloud and SaaS

  • Email platforms

  • File storage

  • Third-party integrations

If it is connected, it is exposed.

What This Means for SMBs, Healthcare, Law Firms, and Schools

Most small organizations believe they are not targets.

The reality is different:

  • You are easier to breach

  • You have less monitoring

  • You are connected to larger organizations

Attackers are not choosing targets based on size.

They are choosing based on accessibility.

The Minimum Security Baseline in 2026

If you do nothing else, do this:

1. Lock Down Identity

  • Enforce MFA everywhere with no exceptions

  • Disable legacy authentication

  • Monitor login behavior and anomalies

2. Implement EDR

  • Antivirus alone is not sufficient

  • Use behavior-based detection

3. Use Real Backups

  • Immutable backups

  • Regular restore testing

  • Stored outside your primary network

4. Patch External Systems Fast

  • Firewalls

  • VPNs

  • Routers

  • All internet-facing systems

The Real Risk

Most breaches happen to organizations that believed they were covered.

They say:

“We have antivirus.”
“We use Microsoft 365.”
“We have never had an issue.”

That mindset is the vulnerability.

Bottom Line

Cybersecurity is no longer about stopping forced entry.

It is about:

  • Detecting unauthorized access

  • Responding before damage spreads

  • Closing the real-world gaps attackers exploit

If your security strategy has not evolved in the last year, it is already outdated.

70% of all cyber attacks target small businesses, I can help protect yours.

#CyberSecurity #MSP #SMBSecurity #IdentitySecurity #DataProtection


Cybersecurity
Technology
Crypto

A Nation-State Revenue Engine, Not a Struggling Regime

May 3, 2026
•
20 min read

A Nation-State Revenue Engine, Not a Struggling Regime

North Korea is having a strong quarter.

U.S. intelligence reports show foreign currency earnings at their highest level in years, driven by two pillars:

  • Cybercrime

  • Weapons sales to Russia

Estimates point to over $1 billion annually from hacking and up to $14 billion tied to arms transfers.

This is not a cash-strapped state.

This is a diversified operation.

The Cyber Division You’re Competing Against

North Korea runs a workforce of thousands of cyber operators.

  • Roughly 7,000 hackers

  • Organized, trained, and funded

  • Focused on financial theft, espionage, and access

But the more concerning shift is not just hacking.

It is infiltration.

The Fake IT Worker Problem

North Korean operatives are now embedding themselves inside Western companies.

They apply for remote IT roles.
They pass interviews.
They get hired.
They get paid.

From there, they:

  • Access internal systems

  • Exfiltrate data

  • Create persistent access points

  • Funnel income back to the regime

No malware required.

No breach alert.

Just a legitimate employee.

Sanctions Didn’t Stop It

Sanctions were designed to cut off funding.

Instead, North Korea adapted.

They built around restrictions using:

  • Cyber theft

  • Remote workforce exploitation

  • Global freelance platforms

  • Arms trade

This is what modern evasion looks like.

Why This Matters to Your Business

This is not a geopolitical issue. It is an operational risk.

  • SMBs hiring remote developers

  • Law firms outsourcing IT support

  • Healthcare organizations using contractors

  • Schools bringing in external vendors

If you hire remotely, you are in scope.

If you trust resumes and interviews alone, you are exposed.

The Real Risk Layer: Human Access

Most organizations focus on:

  • Firewalls

  • Endpoint protection

  • Network monitoring

All necessary.

None of them stop a trusted user with valid credentials.

That is the blind spot.

What You Should Be Doing Now

  • Implement strict identity verification for all hires

  • Use video verification and identity matching

  • Validate geographic consistency of candidates

  • Monitor for abnormal login behavior and access patterns

  • Limit access based on role, not convenience

  • Audit third-party vendors and contractors

Trust should not be granted at hire. It should be continuously verified.

The Bigger Reality

Human risk is not a talking point.

It is a funding mechanism.

Nation-state actors are not waiting for your defenses to fail.

They are getting hired.

And they are billing your payroll while doing it.

The Question Your Board Should Be Asking

How many of your users are who they claim to be?

70% of all cyber attacks target small businesses, I can help protect yours.

#CyberSecurity #InsiderThreat #NationalSecurity #SMBSecurity #DataProtection


Technology
Cybersecurity
AI

The most important thing you will read this week

April 22, 2026
•
20 min read

Your Email Is the Skeleton Key to Your Entire Life

Why You Need to Secure Your Email Today

Most people think their bank account is the most important account they own.

It is not.

It is their email.

If an attacker gets into your email, they do not just read messages. They gain the reset button for almost everything tied to you. That includes banking, brokerage accounts, cell service, car loans, tax portals, shopping accounts, cloud storage, and identity records. The FTC specifically warns that a hacked email account can be used to break into other accounts and should be treated as an urgent recovery event.

Your personal email is a weak point right now in more households and businesses than people realize.

How Hackers Get In So Easily

The attack usually starts somewhere else.

A shopping site gets breached.
A forum gets breached.
A travel site gets breached.
A social app gets breached.

Your email and password combination gets stolen there, then bundled into giant credential lists and sold or shared in criminal circles. Verizon says compromised credentials were an initial access vector in 22% of breaches reviewed in the 2025 DBIR, and its research also found that in the median case only 49% of a user’s passwords across services were distinct. CISA says MFA is the greatest defense against password-based attacks such as credential stuffing and password theft.

That is the opening.

If you reused that same password for your email, attackers do not need to “hack” your inbox in the movie sense. They simply try the stolen password against your email account. That is credential stuffing. It works because people reuse passwords and because stolen passwords stay useful for years.

If you do not use MFA, one exposed password can be enough.

Why Email Access Is So Dangerous

Once attackers control your email, they often control your recovery path.

They can request password resets for:

  • Banking

  • Credit cards

  • Cell carriers

  • Car finance portals

  • IRS-linked services and tax accounts

  • Shopping accounts

  • Cloud storage

  • Social media

  • Business tools

From there, the damage spreads fast.

Attackers can change recovery addresses, intercept verification emails, approve device logins, and start rebuilding your digital identity around themselves. The FTC advises changing the email password immediately, signing out of other sessions, and then securing other accounts because a hacked email account can be used to access services connected to it.

This is how identity theft snowballs.

Once they can impersonate you consistently, they can open accounts, attempt loans, apply for credit, redirect statements, and keep extending the fraud into new areas. The FTC’s identity theft guidance specifically recommends credit freezes and fraud alerts to help stop continued misuse of stolen identity data.

It is endless because email is the hub.

If You Still Use Yahoo or AOL, Move

Here is the blunt version.

If your primary personal email is still on Yahoo or AOL, move it.

Yahoo disclosed one of the largest account compromises ever, ultimately affecting all Yahoo accounts in its 2013 incident, and it separately disclosed another major security issue in 2016. Verizon’s 2017 annual report also stated that the Yahoo data breach previously disclosed affected all of its accounts.

AOL still supports 2-step verification and even security keys, so this is not about saying AOL cannot be secured at all. It is about recommending a stronger modern baseline for most users. Gmail has a more current consumer security ecosystem built around Security Checkup, stronger 2-Step Verification options, passkeys, device/session visibility, recent security activity review, and Google’s move away from “less secure apps.”

If you are starting fresh today, Gmail is the better default choice for most people.

Step-by-Step: How to Secure Gmail Properly

1. Change Your Password First

Start with the password.

Make it unique. Make it long. Make it random. Do not reuse anything from any other site.

Google’s Security Checkup specifically recommends using unique and strong passwords, and the FTC recommends 12 to 15 characters or a passphrase for hacked accounts.

Use a password manager. Do not invent one yourself and hope you remember it.

2. Turn On 2-Step Verification Immediately

Go to your Google Account, open Security & sign-in, and turn on 2-Step Verification. Google says 2-Step Verification helps prevent a hacker from getting into your account even if they steal your password.

Choose the strongest method you can:

  • Best: security key

  • Very strong: Google Prompt

  • Also good: authenticator app

  • Weakest of the common options: SMS codes

Google’s own guidance says security keys are among the most secure second steps, and Google notes that prompts are more secure than text codes.

If you want the strongest practical setup, use a hardware security key and keep a backup key in a safe place.

3. Add Passkeys

Google supports passkeys for sign-in, which can reduce your reliance on passwords and resist common phishing flows. You can manage them in Google Account > Security & sign-in > Passkeys and security keys.

This is one of the smartest upgrades you can make because it makes stolen-password attacks far less useful.

4. Review Your Recovery Email and Recovery Phone

Go into your Google Account and review your recovery options.

Make sure:

  • The recovery email is yours

  • The recovery phone is yours

  • Nothing old, shared, or forgotten is still there

Google lets you add, change, or delete recovery email options from the Security area, and recovery changes may take time to fully take effect.

This matters because attackers often try to change recovery paths after they get in.

5. Check Every Device Signed Into Your Account

Go to Google Account > Security & sign-in > Your devices > Manage all devices.

Review every session.

If you see something unfamiliar, sign it out and change your password immediately. Google provides a device-management page specifically for this review.

This is one of the fastest ways to catch silent compromise.

6. Review Recent Security Events

In your Google Account, check Recent security events.

Look for:

  • New device logins

  • Recovery changes

  • Suspicious sign-in attempts

  • App access you do not recognize

Google provides a recent security events panel for exactly this purpose.

7. Remove Old App Access

Look for third-party apps, extensions, or services that still have access to your Google account.

If you do not use them, revoke them.

Google’s Security Checkup recommends removing apps and browser extensions you do not need. Google also says app passwords are not recommended and that “less secure apps” that rely on only username and password access are being phased out.

Old mail clients and forgotten apps are a common blind spot.

8. Check Gmail Last Account Activity

Inside Gmail on desktop, scroll to the bottom right and click Details under Last account activity.

Google says this lets you review sign-in history, including times and IP addresses used to access your Gmail account.

If anything looks wrong, act immediately.

9. Stop Using Email as Your Only Recovery Method Elsewhere

Once Gmail is secured, go secure the accounts connected to it.

Update your major accounts so they use:

  • App-based MFA or security keys

  • Strong unique passwords

  • Clean recovery settings

Your Gmail cannot be your only line of defense if everything else still trusts weak SMS or reused passwords.

10. Do a Full Security Checkup

Google has a built-in Security Checkup for your account. Run it and clear every warning. It is one of the simplest high-value steps available.

This should be part of your routine, not a one-time event.

What Businesses Miss

Most people lock down their work laptop better than their personal inbox.

That is backwards.

Your personal email can be the attack path into:

  • Your payroll

  • Your mobile carrier

  • Your bank

  • Your tax records

  • Your cloud backups

  • Your business logins

That is why protecting email is an independent security step. Even if your company has good cybersecurity, your personal inbox can still become the soft underbelly attackers use to get leverage over you.

Stop What You’re Doing and Secure It Now

Do not wait until you get a fraud alert.

Do not wait until your phone stops working because your SIM got swapped.

Do not wait until your bank account, IRS profile, or financing portal starts sending you recovery emails you did not request.

Your email is the master key.

Treat it like one.

70% of all cyber attacks target small businesses, I can help protect yours.

#CyberSecurity #GmailSecurity #IdentityProtection #SMBSecurity #DataProtection


Cybersecurity
AI

The Viral Trick Everyone Is Talking About

May 10, 2026
•
20 min read

The “Three Fingers Test” Won’t Save You

But here’s what might.

The Viral Trick Everyone Is Talking About

You may have heard this:

Hold up three fingers on a video call.

If the person can’t replicate it properly…

They’re AI.

Sounds smart.

Sounds simple.

It’s also outdated thinking.

Why People Think This Works

Early deepfake and AI video systems struggled with:

• Hand rendering
• Finger counts
• Natural movement
• Real-time interaction

So the idea was:

“Force the system into something complex.”

And it breaks.

Why That No Longer Holds Up

Modern AI systems have advanced rapidly.

Today’s models can:

• Render hands accurately
• Track movement in real time
• Mimic gestures convincingly
• Respond dynamically

Which means:

👉 The “three fingers test” can pass—even if it’s fake.

The Real Risk

This is where the danger comes in.

People rely on:

• Simple tricks
• Viral advice
• “Quick tests”

And assume they’re safe.

That false confidence is exactly what attackers want.

What Deepfakes Are Actually Used For

This isn’t theoretical anymore.

We’re seeing:

• Fake executives on video calls
• AI-generated voices requesting wire transfers
• Impersonation in hiring and onboarding
• Social engineering at scale

These attacks don’t need perfection.

They just need to be convincing enough under pressure.

Why Humans Still Get Fooled

Because deepfake attacks don’t rely on visuals alone.

They rely on:

• Urgency
• Authority
• Familiarity
• Emotional pressure

By the time you’re thinking about fingers…

You’re already in the trap.

What Actually Works

Instead of gimmicks, use verification protocols:

• Call back on a known number
• Use a second communication channel
• Require pre-established verification phrases
• Never approve sensitive actions on a single interaction

Because identity is no longer visual.

It’s multi-layered.

The Business Impact

For SMBs, this is critical.

Imagine:

A “CEO” joins a video call.

Looks real. Sounds real.

Requests an urgent transfer.

No red flags—except one:

You didn’t verify.

That’s how money moves.

The Bigger Shift

We are entering a world where:

• Seeing is no longer believing
• Hearing is no longer trusting
• Identity can be simulated

Which means security must evolve from:

Recognition → Verification

The Bottom Line

The three-finger test feels clever.

But attackers are already past it.

The real defense isn’t catching flaws.

It’s never trusting a single signal.

70% of all cyber attacks target small businesses, I can help protect yours.

#Cybersecurity #Deepfake #AI #FraudPrevention #MSP

Cybersecurity
Tips

Half Your Company Is Already Compromised. You Just Don’t Know It.

May 6, 2026
•
20 min read

Half Your Company Is Already Compromised. You Just Don’t Know It.

The Breach You Never Saw Coming

41 out of 83 employees.

That’s how many had credentials already stolen and circulating on the dark web.

The CEO didn’t know.
The IT director didn’t know.
The employees definitely didn’t know.

This isn’t rare. This is normal.

How This Happens Quietly

Major platforms get breached constantly.

  • LinkedIn

  • Adobe

  • Dropbox

  • Yahoo

  • Canva

Millions of credentials are stolen, packaged, and sold in bulk.

Attackers don’t rush. They wait.

Then they test those credentials against:

  • Microsoft 365

  • VPN portals

  • Remote access tools

  • Email accounts

All it takes is one reused password.

The Silent Entry Point

Your employee used their LinkedIn password from 2019 for their work email in 2024.

LinkedIn was breached in 2021.

Attackers have had years to weaponize those credentials.

No alerts. No malware. No noise.

Just a login that looks completely legitimate.

Why Businesses Miss This

Most companies focus on what they can control:

  • Firewalls

  • Endpoint protection

  • Network security

All important.

But they ignore what’s already exposed.

The real risk is not always inside your network.
It’s sitting in a database somewhere, waiting to be used.

Where This Hits Hardest

  • SMBs with limited security visibility

  • Law firms with sensitive client data

  • Healthcare organizations handling protected information

  • Schools with large, decentralized user bases

Any environment with reused passwords is a target.

The Reality of Modern Breaches

Credential-based attacks account for 80% of breaches.

No exploit needed. No fancy malware.

Just valid credentials and access.

What You Should Be Doing Right Now

  • Check for exposed credentials across your organization

  • Enforce unique passwords and a password manager

  • Implement MFA everywhere possible

  • Monitor login activity and anomalies

  • Train employees on password reuse risks

Most importantly, assume exposure already happened.

The Question That Matters

When was the last time you checked what’s already stolen?

70% of all cyber attacks target small businesses, I can help protect yours.

#CyberSecurity #DarkWeb #DataBreach #CredentialSecurity #CyberResilience


Technology
Cybersecurity
Science

200 Milliseconds Saved the Internet From Collapse

May 4, 2026
•
20 min read

200 Milliseconds Saved the Internet From Collapse

The Glitch That Shouldn’t Have Mattered

A login delay of 200 milliseconds.

That’s what exposed one of the most dangerous supply chain attacks ever discovered.

Andres Freund wasn’t hunting for a nation-state attack. He noticed something most people would ignore.

His system login felt slightly slower.

Not seconds. Not noticeable lag.

A fraction of a second.

What He Actually Found

That tiny delay led to a massive discovery.

A hidden backdoor inside XZ Utils, a core component used across Linux systems worldwide.

This wasn’t a typical vulnerability.

It was a deliberately planted access mechanism designed to:

  • Bypass authentication

  • Grant remote access

  • Blend in as legitimate system behavior

This was a digital skeleton key.

The Two-Year Setup

This attack wasn’t rushed.

It was methodical.

An unknown actor spent over two years:

  • Contributing to open-source projects

  • Building credibility with maintainers

  • Gaining trust within the developer community

  • Slowly increasing influence over the codebase

Eventually, they earned enough authority to insert malicious code without raising alarms.

This is what a modern supply chain attack looks like.

How Close We Came

The compromised versions were already making their way into major Linux distributions:

  • Debian

  • Fedora

If those versions had fully propagated:

  • Banks

  • Government systems

  • Healthcare infrastructure

  • Enterprise environments

All could have been silently compromised.

No alerts. No ransomware. No noise.

Just access.

Why This Is Terrifying

This attack didn’t target endpoints.

It targeted trust itself.

Organizations rely on open-source software every day. It is embedded in:

  • Servers

  • Cloud platforms

  • Security tools

  • Applications

When that layer is compromised, everything above it is exposed.

The Cybersecurity Lesson Most Miss

Every company invests in:

  • Firewalls

  • Endpoint detection

  • Network monitoring

But this attack bypasses all of that.

Because it lives inside trusted software.

This is the blind spot.

What SMBs, Law Firms, Healthcare, and Schools Should Take From This

You don’t need to run Linux servers to be affected.

You are still exposed through:

  • Vendors

  • SaaS platforms

  • Managed systems

  • Cloud infrastructure

If they rely on compromised components, so do you.

Supply chain risk is your risk.

The Real Story

This wasn’t stopped by a tool.

It wasn’t caught by AI.

It was stopped by curiosity.

One engineer refused to ignore something that felt off.

The Question Worth Asking

What tiny anomaly in your environment are you ignoring right now?

70% of all cyber attacks target small businesses, I can help protect yours.

#CyberSecurity #SupplyChainAttack #Linux #DataProtection #MSP

Cybersecurity
Technology
Mobile-Arena

That Name Isn’t Hidden. It’s One Click Away.

April 19, 2026
•
20 min read

That Name Isn’t Hidden. It’s One Click Away.

The “Private Number” Myth

People assume their phone number is private.

It isn’t.

There are dozens of tools and databases that claim to reveal who’s behind a number. Most are outdated, inaccurate, or full of noise.

But one method is simple, reliable, and already sitting on your phone.

The Zelle Lookup Trick

If a phone number or email is registered with Zelle, you can often see the legal name tied to the account.

Here’s how it works:

  1. Open your banking app that supports Zelle

  2. Start a new payment

  3. Enter the phone number or email

  4. Before sending anything, review the recipient details

In many cases, Zelle will display the real name associated with that account.

No payment required.

Why This Works

Zelle is connected directly to U.S. bank accounts.

Banks are required to verify identity. That means the name you see is typically the actual legal name on file, not a nickname or username.

That makes it far more reliable than:

  • Reverse phone lookup websites

  • Caller ID apps

  • Data broker search tools

Where This Is Useful

  • Verifying unknown contacts before sending money

  • Checking if a suspicious number matches a real identity

  • Avoiding payment scams and impersonation attempts

  • Basic due diligence for SMBs, law firms, and vendors

This is especially relevant in environments where payments move quickly and mistakes are expensive.

Where People Get Burned

This tip cuts both ways.

If you are using your personal number for business, or interacting with unknown parties, your legal name may be exposed without you realizing it.

That creates:

  • Privacy risks

  • Targeting opportunities for attackers

  • Social engineering leverage

The Cybersecurity Angle

This is not just a “trick.” It’s an exposure point.

Attackers use tools like this to:

  • Confirm identities

  • Build profiles

  • Increase credibility in scams

Combine this with data from breaches, LinkedIn, and social media, and they can impersonate someone convincingly.

How to Protect Yourself

  • Be cautious about who you share your phone number or email with

  • Use separate numbers for business and personal use when possible

  • Verify recipients before sending money, every time

  • Assume your identity details are easier to access than you think

The Bigger Picture

Most people worry about hackers breaking in.

They miss the fact that information is already being handed out by the systems they trust.

The risk is not always intrusion.

Sometimes it is visibility.

70% of all cyber attacks target small businesses, I can help protect yours.

#CyberSecurity #DataProtection #SMBSecurity #SocialEngineering #Privacy


Mobile-Arena
Cybersecurity
Technology

Your Phone Number Is a Master Key. Criminals Know It. Do You?

April 21, 2026
•
20 min read

Your Phone Number Is a Master Key. Criminals Know It. Do You?

The Security Gap Nobody Thinks About

Most people protect their email, their passwords, and their devices. Almost nobody thinks to protect their phone number. That oversight is exactly what criminals are counting on.

SIM swapping is one of the most effective and underreported forms of identity theft operating today. It requires no malware, no hacking, and no physical access to your device. All it requires is a convincing phone call.

What Is SIM Swapping

Your phone number is tied to a small chip inside your device called a SIM card. That chip is what connects your number to your phone. When you get a new phone, your carrier transfers your number to a new SIM. It is a routine process. It is also a weapon.

In a SIM swap attack, a criminal calls your mobile carrier pretending to be you. Using personal information gathered from data breaches, social media, or phishing, they convince a customer service representative to transfer your phone number to a SIM card they control. Once that transfer goes through, your phone goes dark. Their phone starts receiving your calls and text messages.

This matters because your phone number is the recovery method for almost everything. Your bank. Your email. Your cryptocurrency exchange. Your two-factor authentication codes. The moment your number is in their hands, every account tied to it becomes accessible.

Real people have lost their life savings this way. It has happened to executives, celebrities, and ordinary small business owners. No one is exempt.

How Criminals Build Their Case Against You

Before making the call to your carrier, attackers research you. They pull your name, address, last four of your Social Security number, and account details from data broker sites, previous breaches, or your own social media. LinkedIn tells them where you work. Facebook tells them your birthday. A previous breach tells them your old passwords. By the time they call your carrier, they often know more verifiable details about you than you would expect.

This is why protecting your carrier account is the first line of defense.

How to Lock Down Your Account by Carrier

VERIZON

Call Verizon at 800-922-0204 or visit a store in person and request a Number Lock and a Port Freeze on your account.

  • Set a strong account PIN that is not your birthday, last four of your SSN, or any number you use elsewhere

  • Enable account notifications so any change to your account triggers an alert to your email

  • In your My Verizon app, review what information is visible and limit what can be changed without in-person verification

  • Ask Verizon to add a note requiring you to appear in store with a government-issued ID before any SIM changes are made

AT&T

Log into your AT&T account online and activate Extra Security under the profile and security settings.

  • Set a wireless passcode that is separate from your account password

  • Request a port validation feature which adds an extra layer before your number can be transferred to another carrier

  • Call AT&T support at 800-331-0500 and ask them to flag your account for in-person verification only for SIM and number changes

  • Review your FirstNet or linked accounts if applicable

T-MOBILE

Log into your T-Mobile account and navigate to the security settings.

  • Enable SIM Protection to prevent unauthorized SIM swaps

  • Set an account PIN and enable the Account Takeover Protection feature

  • Call 611 from your device and ask a representative to add a notation requiring two-factor verification before any account changes

  • Turn on T-Mobile Scam Shield and review what data is visible in your profile

VISIBLE

Visible is a Verizon-owned carrier that operates entirely online with no physical stores, which makes it a higher-risk environment for SIM swapping.

  • Set a strong unique password you use nowhere else

  • Enable two-factor authentication using an authenticator app rather than SMS

  • Secure your email account since it controls your Visible access

  • Contact Visible support through the app and request that any SIM change require additional identity verification steps

General Guidance for All Carriers

  • Do not use your real mother’s maiden name, childhood pet, or hometown as security questions

  • Use a random unrelated word or phrase instead and store it in a password manager

  • Never confirm personal details to an inbound caller claiming to be your carrier

  • Hang up and call the carrier directly

  • Ask your carrier what their escalation process is if your number is ported without your consent

How to Use Screen Time on iPhone to Block Account and Password Settings

This is one of the most underused and most effective tools available to iPhone users. Screen Time was designed for parental controls but it works equally well as a personal lockdown mechanism.

  • Go to Settings and tap Screen Time

  • Tap Turn On Screen Time, then tap This is My iPhone

  • Tap Use Screen Time Passcode and set a PIN that is different from your device passcode

Once Screen Time is active:

  • Tap Content and Privacy Restrictions and enable it

  • Go into Account Changes and set it to Don’t Allow

  • Set Passcode Changes to Don’t Allow

  • Lock down Location Services, Contacts, and Microphone access under Privacy

This prevents attackers from changing your Apple ID, passwords, or locking you out of your own device.

Additional Steps to Protect and Monitor Your Identity

  • Use an authenticator app instead of SMS for two-factor authentication

  • Freeze your credit with Equifax, Experian, and TransUnion

  • Use a password manager with unique passwords for every account

  • Monitor your accounts with identity monitoring services

  • Set up Google Alerts for your name

  • Protect your email with strong passwords and app-based MFA

  • Remove your data from broker sites like Spokeo, WhitePages, and BeenVerified

Final Takeaway

Your phone number is more powerful than most people realize.

Treat it with the same seriousness you give your financial accounts.

Because to an attacker, it is the same thing.

70% of all cyber attacks target small businesses, I can help protect yours.

#CyberSecurity #IdentityProtection #ManagedIT #SMBSecurity #DataProtection


Previous
Next
About
Managed ServicesCybersecurityOur ProcessWho We AreNewsPrivacy Policy
Help
FAQsContact UsSubmit a Support Ticket
Social
LinkedIn link
Twitter link
Facebook link
Have a Question?
Thank you! Your submission has been received!
Oops! Something went wrong while submitting the form.
Copyright © {auto update year} Gigabit Systems All Rights Reserved.
Website by Klarity
Gigabit Systems Inc. BBB Business Review