Suddenly, Liam’s computer screen went black. A single line of red text appeared in the center: Initializing Protocol.
The download button was bright green, slightly pixelated, and pulsed with urgency. Suddenly, Liam’s computer screen went black
The software wasn't a bulk sender at all. It was a Trojan horse. The software wasn't a bulk sender at all
The file was small, which should have been his second warning. He dragged the .rar archive onto his desktop and extracted the contents. Instead of a standard installer, a single application file appeared with a generic icon. He double-clicked it. He dragged the
Then, his screen changed. It was no longer black. It was a ransom note.
The "Turbo Pro" software had instantly triggered a SIM-swap attack using the data it stole from his PC. The hackers now had his business WhatsApp account, his files, and his company's data.
He frantically tried to pull up the Task Manager, but his keyboard was unresponsive. He reached down and yanked the Ethernet cable from the desktop tower, but it was too late.