Tag Archive for: buy

Huge Best Buy sale slashes up to $750 off laptops — here’s the 7 best deals


Best Buy is currently holding a big sale on laptops. Whether you’re looking for a work machine or a gaming powerhouse, there’s a little something for everybody here. Just hurry — these deals are set to expire tomorrow at 1 a.m. ET.

Need help making a decision? This HP OMEN 16-inch Gaming Laptop is on sale for $949. It’s a huge $750 off its usual price and comes specced with an Intel Core i9 CPU, 16GB RAM, and an RTX 3060 GPU. It’s a great machine for the casual or newbie gamer. 

If you’re looking for something more affordable, the Acer Aspire 3 is $379 at Best Buy. It’s $220 off and perfect for everyday work, browsing the web, and the occasional PC game. 

Best Buy laptop deals

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When you buy a criminal’s phone, and paying for social media scams • Graham Cluley


Smashing Security podcast #322: When you buy a criminal’s phone, and paying for social media scams

Personal information is going for a song, and the banks want social media sites to pay when their users get scammed.

All this and much more is discussed in the latest edition of the “Smashing Security” podcast by computer security veterans Graham Cluley and Carole Theriault.

Hosts:

Graham Cluley – @gcluley
Carole Theriault – @caroletheriault

Episode links:

Sponsored by:

  • Bitwarden – Password security you can trust. Bitwarden is an open source password manager trusted by millions of individuals, teams, and organizations worldwide for secure password storage and sharing.
  • Kolide – Kolide ensures that if your device isn’t secure it can’t access your cloud apps. It’s Zero Trust for Okta. Watch a demo today!
  • Outpost24 – Understand your shadow IT risk with a free attack surface analysis.

Support the show:

You can help the podcast by telling your friends and colleagues about “Smashing Security”, and leaving us a review on Apple Podcasts or Podchaser.

Become a supporter via Patreon or Apple Podcasts for ad-free episodes and our early-release feed!

Follow us:

Follow the show on Twitter at @SmashinSecurity, or on Mastodon, on the Smashing Security subreddit, or visit our website for more episodes.

Thanks:

Theme tune: “Vinyl Memories” by Mikael Manvelyan.
Assorted sound effects: AudioBlocks.

Found this article interesting? Follow Graham Cluley on Twitter or Mastodon to read more of the exclusive content we post.


Graham Cluley is a veteran of the anti-virus industry having worked for a number of security companies since the early 1990s when he wrote the first ever version of Dr Solomon’s Anti-Virus Toolkit for Windows. Now an independent security analyst, he regularly makes media appearances and is an international public speaker on the topic of computer security, hackers, and online privacy.
Follow him on Twitter at @gcluley, on Mastodon at @[email protected], or drop him an email.

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Attackers can buy evil Play apps for as little as $3000 – Security


Thrifty bad actors could pay as little as US$2000 ($3000) to get a malicious app into the Google Play store, according to Kaspersky researchers, but prices also range as high as $US20,000.

In research published at Securelist, the researchers analysed offers of Google Play threats for sale between 2019 and 2023, and found that the most popular app categories to hide malware were cryptocurrency trackers, financial apps, QR code scanners and dating apps.

The researchers price-benchmarked a variety of criminal services on offer: as well as pushing malware onto users’ Android devices, they looked at the cost of malware obfuscation, and advertising.

Between the two extremes, Kaspersky wrote, the average price for a compromised Google Play loader – which injects malicious code into a target app, which replaces the original on Play – is US$6975.

“However, if cyber criminals want to buy the loader source code, the price immediately rockets, reaching the upper limit of the price range,” the researchers added.

The researchers said that the criminals “most frequently … promise to inject code into an app with 5000 downloads or more.”

Binding services, another popular delivery mechanism, insert malicious code in an app, but rather than distributing it through Play, attackers push the app at victims via phishing text or “dubious websites with cracked games and software”.

These services, Kaspersky said, “usually cost about US$50 to US$100, or US$65 per file” for a successful installation.

Malware obfuscation helps malicious apps get past Google Play’s checks, and Kaspersky found it is offered per application, “or for a subscription, for example, once per month.”

The advantage of subscriptions is the same as in the legal world, the researchers wrote:
“One of the sellers offers obfuscation of 50 files for US$440, while the cost of processing only one file by the same provider is about US$30.”

Advertising to get users to pick up the compromised apps varies greatly: “The average price is US$0.50, with offers ranging from US$0.10 to US$1.”

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Big Laptop Go Fast – AORUS 17X