Article
No Deal Is Worth Identity Theft: Ways to Prepare for Secure Holiday Shopping
Cybersecurity Trends
Cybersecurity 101

By Kevin Baker
The holidays are upon us and with them often comes a mad rush to “Act now!” to score the best online deals “before it’s too late!”
Unfortunately, competitive, hurried Black Friday-type shopping can translate to distracted shopping, which can translate into a dream opportunity for social engineering. The bad guys want you to be in a hurry. They want you to be distracted. It makes their jobs easier. And they know that the holiday season is a prime time to prey on the unprepared, tricking them into opening phishy emails, clicking on malicious links, or using their phones in other insecure ways.
Secure shopping takes a little bit of work, but the rewards are well worth the effort
While it’s always important to think about locking down your identity online, it’s particularly important over the holidays. So, don’t wait until the middle of the shopping season to change your security practices. Instead, get started now by implementing some security basics. To start:
Slow down. If you’re in a hurry for deals and getting your shopping done early, you may also be in a hurry to get hacked. So, take a beat and be thoughtful about where you shop and what you click.
If a deal looks too good to be true, it most definitely is. Beware of phishing emails and special offers, especially those with a fast deadline to act.
Use good passwords. And by good, I mean new. Billions of passwords have been and will be lost in breaches and thus, the only guaranteed password is a brand-new one. To be on the safe side, update all your passwords before — and after — the holidays.
Whenever possible, use multi-factor authentication (MFA). And if you’re buying from a reputable retailer, you can almost certainly use multi-factor sign-in, such as with Google Authenticator, and have it challenge you every time.
Your phone alone isn’t safe enough for online shopping. Be careful using your phone to shop if you don’t have security applications on it. Better yet, get antivirus and malware protections added to your phone — for example, Trend Micro Pay Guard and IBM Trusteer.
Update, update, update. Most laptops have malware protection, but if you spread purchases across your laptop and phone, make sure both are malware-free and updated to their latest versions. Again, an anti-malware protection program like Trend will see that you’re using two devices and protect across both.
Check the privacy settings of your applications. If you use shopping apps, which I wouldn’t suggest doing because it’s corralling you into a certain set of vendors, you can still remove unnecessary permissions. For instance, why would an online retailer need access to your contacts? Or your camera?
Check for https or the golden lock. If you’ll be entering your information onto any site — whether from your phone or laptop — be sure to look for the https or golden lock symbol, which lets you know it’s encrypted.
Check out as a “guest” instead of allowing retailers to store your credit card information. Or, if you’re going to let a business save your information, let it be via a secure application like Google Pay.
Public Wi-Fi is not your friend. If you don’t have a secure phone, don’t use public Wi-Fi to shop. Or, even if you have a secure phone, try to avoid using public Wi-Fi to shop.
Use a virtual private network (VPN) to protect your data while on another network.
Beware of package tracking scams designed to steal your information or infect you with malware. Chances are, you’ll have packages arriving this holiday season. Before you click on a link to track a package, doublecheck the domain. For instance, if you get an Amazon tracking email, but the domain isn’t amazon.com, don’t click. Humans read in big chunks of information and when something looks familiar, our brains will grab and replace the bad stuff with what’s in our memory. So, take the extra time and go to where you purchased the item to get the tracking information.
The holidays are meant to be a fun, happy, and exciting time. Just don’t let excitement about a great deal overcome caution while shopping.
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Following law enforcement disruption of Cryptex and Garantex, AudiA6 emerged as another platform involved in financial activities linked to ransomware groups. Investigators believe that AudiA6 became a central hub for cybercriminals seeking to launder stolen digital assets while obscuring the transaction trail from authorities.
On June 10, 2026, a coordinated operation resulted in two arrests in Georgia, the dismantling of key infrastructure (30+ servers, 25 domains), the freezing or seizure of over €778,000 in crypto, and the takedown of the AudiA6 and Dark2Web platforms.
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Ransomware groups and cybercriminal networks are increasingly leveraging sophisticated techniques, including chain-hopping, decentralized exchanges, and mixer-as-a-service platforms, to rapidly move illicit cryptocurrency across multiple blockchains, effectively obscuring transaction trails. Concurrently, the widespread use of fraudulent exchange accounts, mule wallets, and privacy-enhancing tools has elevated cryptocurrency laundering to a core enabler of the cybercrime ecosystem, allowing actors to bypass anti-money-laundering controls at scale. This investigation identified over 6,000 KYC records linked to money-mule accounts, many of which were tied to Russian-speaking intermediaries specifically recruited to facilitate the movement of illicit proceeds. These threat actors systematically used both commercial and domain-controlled email services to establish mule accounts across multiple cryptocurrency platforms. Collectively, these findings underscore the growing scale, coordination, and professionalization of cryptocurrency-enabled crime, highlighting the critical need for sustained, intelligence-led, and internationally coordinated efforts to disrupt these evolving financial ecosystems.
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After a few repetitions, the modules seemed to avoid nearly all EDR solutions, despite the agent’s initial suggestion of a high failure rate. Although researchers found no evidence that AI was embedded in deployed malware or was operating independently in victim environments, the technology was still used to accelerate the iterative process of developing, testing, and refining payloads against security products, shortening the period between the publication of offensive security research and its practical implementation by threat actors.
Analyst Comments
AI-driven tools like this could accelerate the pace and sophistication of ransomware attacks, enabling even relatively inexperienced actors to launch high-impact campaigns. This development underscores the urgent need for security solutions to adapt to AI-assisted threats. Organizations must respond by strengthening detection engineering, improving visibility across environments, and maintaining robust security fundamentals.
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Rather than targeting the end user first, this campaign is unique in its initial exploitation of the system, followed by social engineering attempts. This hybrid attack style is likely being leveraged to bypass traditional defenses.
This recent campaign also highlights how trusted web properties can be weaponized at scale and coupled with unpatched CMS vulnerabilities. Rather than using the CMS compromise to perpetrate a single attack, threat actors turned it into a supply-chain attack that ultimately affected over 700 trusted websites.
Analyst Comments
As network defenders and their tools enhance threat detection capabilities, adversaries increasingly seek methods to bypass these defenses. By combining vulnerability exploitation, social engineering techniques, and staging for ancillary attacks, this campaign successfully bypassed traditional defenses and inflicted significant impact. Defending against hybrid cyberattacks requires comprehensive security controls beyond simply patching vulnerabilities. Organizations should focus on limiting movement within the environment, detecting abuse of trusted applications, and preventing end-user manipulation.
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