Potter wrote: ↑Mon Mar 20, 2023 11:28 am
mangocrazy wrote: ↑Mon Mar 20, 2023 10:12 am
Give me a break. Your paranoia is showing. And you have no idea what my digital footprint looks like, and neither does your mythical African scammer.
Yeah I go through life being paranoid
Mythical scammers, lol.
The cost of cybercrime in 2022 was estimated at 8.4 trillion US dollars. It’s estimated to rise to $10.5 trillion by 2025.
You absolute whopper.
It was all going so well until you started on the insults. Oh well. Nothing much changes.
As with 'real life' crime the cybercrime spectrum varies from the trivial to the truly mind-boggling, but you seem to be conflating all cybercrime into one paranoia-inducing lump. At one end of the spectrum we have your mythical African scammer pumping out loads of 'Nigerian prince' emails, equivalent in real life to someone trying your door to see if it's locked or not. At the other end we have government agencies who have the tools to crash power grids, markets and anything digitally-connected.
Anyone with a few active brain cells should be able to defeat the former, no-one really stands a chance of resisting the latter unless they've lived off-grid all their life. The majority of cybercrime is targetted at the low-hanging fruit - maximum reward for minimum effort. The type of high level stuff you referenced would be targetted at a level well above anyone on this forum (unless we have any closet billionaires who are keeping schtum). It's all proportional - the more you have and the more you flash it about, the more likely you are to be a target. Simples.
For most of us it's a case of doing due diligence on all digital correspondence, keeping your security updates, AV and firewalls up to date and staying out of the seedier corners of t'Internet. But then I'm sure you already know that.
There is no cloud, just somebody else's computer.