Imagine you receive a text message that looks off.

Source: Shutterstock
You’ve had cybersecurity training at work and know not to click on or download links in texts coming from random numbers or email addresses.
But herein lies the rub: now you don’t have to do anything except receive a text and you could still get infected by some of the latest, ultra-sophisticated spyware known as “zero-click exploits.” They can leave your phone, computer or smartwatch completely compromised by unscrupulous hackers, without you ever knowing.
Read the full article
More on Cybersecurity: -How Business Leaders Can Avoid The Next Breach
–Cybersecurity expert says Facebook outage ‘likely an attack’
–Home Working Is Creating Dangers, New Business for Cybersecurity