FBI Warns That Hackers Are Posing As Fake Feds — What You Need To Know https://www.forbes.com/sites/daveywinder/2025/11/27/fbi-warns-that-hackers-are-posing-as-fake-feds---what-you-need-to-know/ Never share passwords, 2FA codes, or login details with anyone who contacts you—real companies never ask. If you get a “fraud alert,” hang up and call your bank/exchange directly using a number you already trust. Bookmark official login pages; never Google them. Legit support will never demand your MFA code or remote access. Holding big money on an exchange? Move it off. A multi-signature wallet keeps your bitcoin fully under your control, off breach target lists, and safe even if one key gets compromised. Your keys, your bitcoins—done right.
Chat Control: EU lawmakers finally agree on the voluntary scanning of your private chats You can't just "slightly weaken" true end-to-end encryption without breaking it entirely. If a system is built to scan your messages before they're encrypted (like some proposed laws want), that capability can always be abused, broadened, or hacked by others later. Stick to messaging apps that offer real end-to-end encryption, where the code is fully open source and independently verifiable. And stay alert—bills and regulations like these are often attempts to sneak in backdoors that let governments (or anyone who compromises them) read your private conversations.
Voltage co-founder: Bitcoin’s Lightning Network is bringing crypto into daily life Voltage’s Aaron Bollinger said that Lightning payments are already being rolled out across Jack Dorsey’s Square network. https://www.thestreet.com/crypto/innovation/voltage-cofounder-bitcoins-lightning-network-is-bringing-crypto-into-daily-life A significant development in the adoption of Lightning, a Bitcoin payment system, has been buried in a recent article. According to a Voltage executive, all Square payment terminals will have Lightning integration by the end of the year. This is a substantial breakthrough, as it means many merchants will unknowingly have the ability to accept Bitcoin payments. Although some of these merchants may not retain the Bitcoin they receive, others who have been eager to use Bitcoin but lacked a compatible point-of-sale system may now be able to do so, potentially offsetting the difference.
You can refuse to let third parties control your cell phone, internet, or debit cards. That’s exactly what I do: • Phone: GrapheneOS with zero Google involvement • Internet: always-on VPN (including my own self-hosted VPN) • Payments: only local debit cards when necessary, and mostly — everything under my own control.