Every week there are new ones. I sort through them all — what's real, what's hype, and what you can actually do about it. Five minutes, once a week. That's it.
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Free. One email a week, plus the occasional tool Craig built to keep you safer.
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Watch for an email from [email protected] — one click confirms you, and your checklist arrives right after. Check your Promotions or spam folder if you don't see it in a few minutes.
Your welcome gift: "7 Signs Your Windows Computer Is Already Compromised."
A one-page checklist you can run down in five minutes — the quiet signs that something's already wrong, in plain English, with what each one means and what to do about it. The brief keeps you a step ahead of what's coming; this tells you what may already be on your machine right now.
Here's the trick: it's not the obvious scam. It's the one built to look ordinary — a con artist wearing your bank's logo, your vendor's name, even a note that looks like it's from your own family. That's not yours to catch every time. That's the whole design.
And it's not just email. It's the privacy setting that quietly switched itself on, the breach in the news that actually affects you, the new AI trick nobody's named yet — too much for anyone to track alone. A checklist you read once goes stale; a trusted voice in your inbox every week doesn't.
You shouldn't have to become a security expert just to keep up with the people trying to scam you.
For 35 years, I've made cybersecurity make sense — on the radio, with businesses, and with families trying to stay ahead of this stuff. I've heard from thousands of people who got caught, and thousands more who didn't, because they knew what to look for. This brief is me doing for you what I do on the air every week: cutting through the noise and telling you, plainly, what actually matters and what to do about it. No fear, no jargon, no sales pitch — just the read I'd give a friend.
The tech that matters, the latest scams, the privacy you didn't know you were losing — cut down to what you actually need to know.
The specific threat making the rounds right now — and exactly how to spot it before you click.
A single concrete step — a setting to change, a habit to fix — that makes you safer this week. Never a homework list.
The headlines that actually matter — AI, privacy, the latest breach — translated out of the jargon.
One email a week. Now and then I'll also point you to a tool my team and I built to keep you safer — only the ones I'd use myself. Unsubscribe in one click, anytime; I never sell your data.
This is the kind of heads-up that lands in your inbox each week — no signup needed to read it.
Microsoft's "Recall" quietly snapshots your screen every few seconds — your messages, your banking, your passwords as you type them — and stores them on your PC. Most people have no idea it's running. Here's why it's a problem, and the two-minute fix to switch it off.
⚠ Scam of the weekThis version names a real project pulled from LinkedIn, so it reads as legit. The one question that gives it away — every team should know it.
✅ One thing to do this weekThe highest-payoff habit most people skip. Step by step, no tech background needed.
Drop in your first name and email. No card, no catch.
Watch for a one-click confirmation email — and your checklist, "7 Signs Your Business Computer Is Already Compromised," lands right after.
One five-minute brief — the scam going around, the privacy fix, the one thing to do. Unsubscribe in a click, anytime.
Picture it: next week a slick email lands — the kind that fools half an office — and you spot it in two seconds, because you read about it on Tuesday. That's who this makes you — the one who actually keeps up, and sees the next one coming. Get the brief, and your checklist "7 Signs Your Business Computer Is Already Compromised" is on the way in.
Free. One email a week, plus the occasional tool Craig built to keep you safer. Unsubscribe anytime; we never sell your data.