@xv_n86: 😇 #fyp #cristianoronaldo

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Sunday 07 June 2026 12:03:09 GMT
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1. Never connect to public Wi-Fi. Hackers can intercept your data on unsecured networks. Use mobile data or a VPN instead. 2. Never use SMS as your two-factor authentication. Text-based codes can be intercepted. Through something called a SIM swap attack, a criminal can trick your carrier into transferring your phone number to their device and get into your accounts. Use an authenticator app instead. 3. Never leave Bluetooth on when you’re not using it. Bluetooth is a wireless signal anyone nearby can probe. Turn it off when you’re out in public. 4. Never reuse the same password across multiple accounts. If one account gets breached, every account with that same password is now compromised. A password manager makes it easy to have unique passwords for everything. 5. Never click links in text messages you weren’t expecting. Smishing is phishing via text and it is one of the fastest growing scams right now. Even if it looks like it’s from your bank, go directly to the app or website instead. 6. Never plug into a public USB charging station. A charging port can also be a data port. Cybersecurity experts have shown that ordinary-looking cables can give a hacker full remote access to your device. Bring your own charger and plug into a wall outlet. 7. Never ignore software updates. Updates patch security vulnerabilities. Every day you delay is a day hackers can exploit what has already been fixed. 8. Never save passwords in your Notes app. (Unless you have it biometrically locked down) Your Notes app is not encrypted. If someone gets into your phone, they get everything. Use a password manager instead.
1. Never connect to public Wi-Fi. Hackers can intercept your data on unsecured networks. Use mobile data or a VPN instead. 2. Never use SMS as your two-factor authentication. Text-based codes can be intercepted. Through something called a SIM swap attack, a criminal can trick your carrier into transferring your phone number to their device and get into your accounts. Use an authenticator app instead. 3. Never leave Bluetooth on when you’re not using it. Bluetooth is a wireless signal anyone nearby can probe. Turn it off when you’re out in public. 4. Never reuse the same password across multiple accounts. If one account gets breached, every account with that same password is now compromised. A password manager makes it easy to have unique passwords for everything. 5. Never click links in text messages you weren’t expecting. Smishing is phishing via text and it is one of the fastest growing scams right now. Even if it looks like it’s from your bank, go directly to the app or website instead. 6. Never plug into a public USB charging station. A charging port can also be a data port. Cybersecurity experts have shown that ordinary-looking cables can give a hacker full remote access to your device. Bring your own charger and plug into a wall outlet. 7. Never ignore software updates. Updates patch security vulnerabilities. Every day you delay is a day hackers can exploit what has already been fixed. 8. Never save passwords in your Notes app. (Unless you have it biometrically locked down) Your Notes app is not encrypted. If someone gets into your phone, they get everything. Use a password manager instead.

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