The 15,000 Dollars Voice Call
Pyyhkäise näyttääksesi valikon
In July 2025, a mother in Florida picked up the phone. The voice on the other end was her daughter's — crying, panicked, saying she'd been in a car accident and was now at a police station. Then a man's voice took over, claiming to be the attorney handling her case. He needed $15,000 in bail money within the hour.
The mother drove to her bank, withdrew the cash, and handed it to a courier who came to her door.
Her actual daughter was at work. Perfectly fine. The voice was an AI clone — generated from three seconds of audio scraped from her daughter's TikTok account. The "attorney" was an actor. The courier was a member of an organized crime ring operating out of Southeast Asia.
This was not a complex hack. It was a phone call. It worked.
Welcome to the internet of 2026.
Why The Old Advice Stopped Working
If you learned how to be safe online any time before 2024, almost everything you learned is now incomplete. Not wrong — incomplete. The classic advice — "check the URL, don't click strange links, use strong passwords" — was built for a world where scammers had to type their own phishing emails in broken English and hope you weren't paying attention.
That world is gone. Today:
- AI writes phishing emails that are grammatically perfect, personalized with details scraped from your LinkedIn, and indistinguishable from a real message;
- Voice cloning needs about 3 seconds of source audio to produce an 85%-accurate clone of someone's voice;
- Deepfake video can fake a Zoom call from your CEO well enough to authorize $25 million wire transfers — that actually happened, in 2024, to a Hong Kong-based employee of the engineering firm Arup;
- QR-code phishing ("quishing") rose 587% in 2025 — those harmless-looking codes in restaurants and parking meters can lead to fake login pages;
- Pig butchering scams — slow, months-long romance manipulation through dating apps that ends with the victim wiring their savings to "crypto investments" — have stolen $75 billion globally since 2020.
In 2025 alone, AI-related crime got its own category in the FBI's annual Internet Crime Report. Global scam losses crossed $1 trillion for the first time.
The Three Pillars Of Modern Internet Safety
Eighteen chapters might sound like a lot. It isn't. The whole course is organized around three things:
- Section 1 — Your accounts. Passwords, password managers, two-factor authentication, passkeys, and what to do when you're hacked;
- Section 2 — Spotting deception. Phishing, deepfakes, voice clones, romance scams, fake sites, QR codes, and a universal filter that catches almost everything;
- Section 3 — Daily life. Phones, public WiFi, app permissions, software updates, and a dedicated chapter on protecting parents, kids, and elderly relatives.
By the end, you'll be safer than 95% of internet users. Not because you'll know fancy techniques — but because you'll have the right small habits.
What This Course Won't Do
A few things to clarify before we start:
- It won't make you bulletproof. Nothing does. A determined, well-funded attacker targeting you specifically can win. The goal here is to put you above the threshold where mass scammers, opportunistic crooks, and even most targeted attempts give up and move to easier prey;
- It won't require you to be technical. If you can install an app, you can do everything in this course;
- It won't preach paranoia. The point isn't to be afraid. It's to spend 30 minutes once setting things up properly, so you can go back to enjoying the internet without checking your shoulder.
1. Which statements reflect the new realities of internet safety as described in this chapter
2. What are the three main pillars of modern internet safety that this course is organized around?
Kiitos palautteestasi!
Kysy tekoälyä
Kysy tekoälyä
Kysy mitä tahansa tai kokeile jotakin ehdotetuista kysymyksistä aloittaaksesi keskustelumme