The Current-Sat
Plus: Gmail pro trick, antivirus company busted, amazing cancer breakthrough
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February 24, 2024

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Hey there, you look good on this spectacular Saturday! Let’s start with our trivia. The inventor of the world’s most popular board game, Monopoly, created it in 1904 to demonstrate what? Was it … property ownership, gambling, land overdevelopment or the stock market? Answer’s at the end!

🛑 Today’s top story is an important one, folks. It breaks my heart how many people reach out after they’ve lost money to a scam. I used Incogni to get a ton of my private info off the web, and I bet you’ll want to try it, too. The spam texts and calls have literally stopped. Such a relief! — Kim

📫 First-time reader? Sign up here. (It’s free!)

IN THIS ISSUE

  • 💸 Data = Money
  • 💰 Avast hit with major fee
  • 🙏 New cancer treatment

TODAY'S TECH HACK

Your info is worth a lot

A lot of numbers cross my desk — er, computer screen — every day, like these: 10,400 people monitored Taylor Swift’s flight to the Super Bowl in real time, 13,000 folks had their Wyze camera footage leaked, and Americans lost $10 billion to scams last year.

A new report from the FTC paints a pretty scary picture using — you guessed it — some pretty scary numbers. In 2023 alone, 2.6 million people were victims of fraud, and around 1 million were targets of identity theft.

“Kim, that could never happen to me.” I hear this all the time. Maybe you heard about the New York magazine columnist who got conned out of $50,000. Her beat? Personal finance. Oof.

Before we leave that grim FTC report

About 416,000 of those identity theft victims only found out something was wrong after they got an alert from their credit card company or they tried to apply for a new card. By then, the damage is done.

So, who’s a target? Sorry, friend, but it’s just about anyone. Some cybercrimes are large-scale — think ransomware targeting huge corporations — but in the wild world of fraud, everyone with a bank account, credit card or, heck, even a mailbox is a potential victim.

Hey, you, smarty-pants

I hear so many of these stories. There was the man who called me because Apple’s Security Department (there is no such thing!) told him there was porn in his iCloud account. Yup, to get rid of it, he paid them $150,000.

One woman called my show because her brother had been conned three different times, losing a total of $400,000. Another caller, a super-smart Air Force retiree, was tricked by her online boyfriend (they’d never met in person) into handing over $1 million!

It’s not just older folks or the easily tricked. Studies reveal well-educated people with good jobs are just as vulnerable. A recent FTC report showed those in the Gen Z and millennial brackets are 34% more likely to report losing money than those over 60.

Part of the reason spotting attacks like these is so hard is the sheer amount of information scammers have access to. That’s why I wanted to tell you about Incogni. I am so glad I found this service!

For a few bucks, anyone can buy a whole dossier of data on you — your workplace and role, your family members' names and contact info, where you live, and how much you paid for your house. The list goes on and on.

There’s a way to shortcut the process

I’ll tell you from firsthand experience, you can remove yourself one by one, but it’s a major pain and more frustrating than you’d believe. Then again, remember these sites want you to get lost in the confusing steps, to just throw your hands up and say, “Whatever.”

Think of Incogni as your personal privacy service. They find all the people-search and data broker sites your info is listed on, then they submit requests to remove you. It all happens automatically after you set up your Incogni account.

I regularly get emails from Incogni about its progress. So far, it's cleared my info from 151 of these creepy databases — saving me an estimated 113 hours. That’s almost five days! Even better, they make sure my info stays off for the long haul.

✅ Right now, while you’re thinking about it, let Incogni do the work. I negotiated a deal just for you: 60% off. Stop waiting and take back your privacy. I’m sure glad I did. I love not getting any spam texts and calls! Silence really is golden.

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DEALS OF THE DAY

Get smart on the cheap

  • Smart plugs can transform a lamp, fan, humidifier or anything else.
  • Control the lights with your voice with Govee color-changing smart bulbs.
  • Save money and energy with a smart thermostat.
  • This doorknob lets you in the house using your fingerprints.
  • Upgrade your sprinklers to keep the lawn green without overwatering. It all happens automatically.

WEB WATERCOOLER

📍 Level up: Navigation app Waze is rolling out much-anticipated alerts for stuff like speed bumps and sharp turns. There’s always an upgraded way to report road hazards and police activity. FYI, you can add my voice to your Waze app. Fun times!

Turning the tide: The FDA has approved a new treatment that supercharges tumor cells to fight cancer. The cells are then infused back into the patient. It’s pricey (over $500,000), but it works — Scott Goedeke's tumor shrunk significantly in six weeks. Such great news, right?

Bad day at the office: Rivian, once the darling of the EV world, cut 10% of its staff and dialed back on production. Its stock took a 25% nosedive. Will the R2 model save the day? With production not starting until 2026 and battery fears looming, sounds like a bumpy road. I wouldn’t buy one.

Busted: The FTC hit antivirus company Avast with a $16.5 million fine for selling your browsing secrets for ads. They promised to protect users’ privacy … while making bank off of it since 2014. Need a new option? TotalAV is $19 for a year.*

🎮 Keeping up with the other Kim: Kim Kardashian: Hollywood fans, say goodbye to your digital dream life. The game is shutting down in April, and players like Alexis Costello (WSJ, paywall link) are heartbroken to lose their jets and Tokyo homes.

LISTEN UP

Ace your job search with these tricks

Crafted your perfect resume? Even if it looks stellar, there might be something you've overlooked.

Play Now • 6:12  ▶

IN CASE YOU MISSED IT

Think twice before you click. Google results are getting harder to trust.

Wonderful widgets. This quick upgrade can make your computer more useful.

It’s getting hot. I mean your old phone battery. Here are signs you need a new phone now.

Their kids died in school shootings. Now parents are using their children’s AI voices to tell Washington about it. This is powerful stuff.

Scroll on. Instead of trusting tips you find on social from who knows who, use mine. They’re so much better, just sayin’.

TECH LIFE UPGRADES

Organize your life: Need a great way to keep track of everything you have in the attic, garage or wherever? Try the Sortly app for Android and Apple to inventory all your stuff. The free version has everything you need for a basic inventory. Yay!

📶 No bars: When your cell service is wonky, switch your phone to Airplane mode, wait a few seconds, then change it back. This will reconnect you to the nearest cell tower.

Sweet side gig: You can make up to $30 an hour as a virtual assistant — essentially, a secretary who works from home. Find employers looking for full- or part-time assistants on sites like FlexJobs.

🤳 iPhone speedster: There’s a faster way to send pics to your friends in iOS 17. Open Messages and select the person to send a pic to, then tap and hold the + (plus) until you see your photo gallery. Tap the picture or video you want, and send away!

WHAT THE TECH?

WHAT THE TECH?

Better late than navel!

UNTIL NEXT TIME ...

The answer: Land overdevelopment. In 1904, Elizabeth Magie patented The Landlord's Game to show the economic consequences of land concentration and overdevelopment. It became Monopoly by Parker Brothers in 1935. Did you hear they removed some Monopoly game pieces? They were thimbles of an older time.

✅ Don’t forget to check out Incogni when you have a minute. Reader Doran dropped me this line: “Thanks for the heads-up about Incogni. I subscribed to it in January and now my junk mail is almost nothing.” Amazing, right? Use my link and code KIM60 for 60% off.

👋 See you right back here tomorrow with the crazy story of the SWAT team showing up at my house. Plus, I’ll tell you the tech you need to protect yourself and your family. — Kim

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