logo
McAfee Total Protection spots scams before they hit you—and your wallet

McAfee Total Protection spots scams before they hit you—and your wallet

How often have you received an email and wondered if it was legit? How much time do you think you've spent analyzing emails and links to see if content was safe to open? McAfee is reporting that the average American spends 94 hours a year just trying to figure out if a message is real or a scam; that's a lot of time spent second-guessing. Luckily, with the help of McAfee, you can take that time back.
Starting today, McAfee is introducing Scam Detector—your first line of defense against text, email and video scams. It's the most comprehensive scam protection available, and it's included at no extra cost with all McAfee core plans, including McAfee+ and McAfee Total Protection.
Here's a look at McAfee's current deals and promotions:
McAfee is infinitely better at catching scams than most competitors and performs more than four billion AI threat scans daily. McAfee also provides cutting-edge, AI threat detection that's been developed by world-class researchers. They offer the world's first automated deepfake detector among online providers.
Shop McAfee plans
Get protection from scam texts before you even open a message. Scam Detector goes to work and lets you know which texts aren't safe and should not be opened. McAfee flags suspicious emails, so you don't have to worry if it's real or a scam. It even gives you an analysis of the email so you know exactly why it was flagged. Then, you'll be alerted automatically if they detect a potential video scam.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Army surveillance balloons spotted over Tucson raise privacy concerns from advocates
Army surveillance balloons spotted over Tucson raise privacy concerns from advocates

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Army surveillance balloons spotted over Tucson raise privacy concerns from advocates

An Aerostar high-altitude balloon as seen from the ground in Tucson. Photo by Dugan Meyer The U.S. Army and a private company are flying high-altitude surveillance balloons over the Tucson area, raising concerns among privacy advocates. Multiple high-altitude balloons have been spotted over the Tucson and Sierra Vista area for more than a week, with one balloon in particular staying over the area longer than any of the others. That balloon, with the registration number N257TH, has made headlines in the past. The balloon is owned by South Dakota aerospace company Aerostar, and in 2023 was mistaken for a Chinese spy balloon. The balloon is actually part of Aerostar's 'Thunderhead' balloon system, which has been doing multiple tests with the military and other contractors across the nation and around the globe. SUBSCRIBE: GET THE MORNING HEADLINES DELIVERED TO YOUR INBOX 'It is a technology that should not and constitutionally cannot be applied to the American people,' Jay Stanley, a senior policy analyst at the American Civil Liberties Union, told the Arizona Mirror. 'Even testing for eventual overseas use in legitimate combat theaters raises a lot of questions about what kind of data is being collected.' Aerostar would not answer specific questions about what type of testing was being done. The company referred additional questions to the U.S. Department of Defense and the Army, neither of which responded to multiple requests for comment. Aerostar confirmed that the flights were not connected to U.S. Customs and Border Patrol or Department of Homeland Security programs, 'however high-altitude balloons would be ideal for that type of mission,' Aerostar Culture and Communications Director Anastasia Quanbeck said in an email to the Mirror. 'By leveraging directional wind patterns at high altitudes, Aerostar's Thunderhead Balloon Systems offer groundbreaking capabilities for navigation and persistence over areas of interest,' she said. 'Aerostar Thunderhead Balloon Systems are capable of supporting intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance missions, as well as extending communications across wide distances, environmental monitoring, earth observation, and scientific research.' Quanbeck said she was not able to discuss the work the company does with the DOD or the Army. The 'Thunderhead' balloons are similar to 'spy balloons' that have made international headlines in recent years. They fly between 60,000 to 100,000 feet, twice the height of a commercial airliner, and can carry much larger payloads than a conventional drone or other small high altitude spy-planes. After Chinese spy-balloons made incursions into United States airspace in 2023, it was reported that the Army would begin pursuing a similar program to launch in 2025. Aerostar had previously been used in testing exercises. In the past, Aerostar has used blimps as surveillance systems. They were originally used for surveillance in combat zones overseas, then in 2012 were used along the border and still are often spotted at the border today. However, the systems that have been seen floating over southern Arizona in recent weeks have key differences from the blimps: they sit higher in the sky, are much larger, can stay afloat for much longer and can carry larger payloads. As reported by The War Zone, the Army has been researching using high-altitude balloons to deploy drone swarms into enemy territory far above the reach of enemy defenses. But the balloons over southern Arizona raise questions about privacy. In 2021, the 4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that the Baltimore Police Department's use of an aerial surveillance program that recorded virtually all of the city for 12 hours a day for six months was unconstitutional. Stanley thinks that case is pertinent when talking about what may be going on in Arizona. 'I think, if anything, it becomes more sensitive when the military is doing it,' Stanley said. Wide-area persistent surveillance or wide-area airborne surveillance is a technique that got its start in early days of the Iraq war but later would find itself in the hands of police. The technology has evolved from being very heavy but is now light enough to fit onto blimps and balloons. Aerostar and the military have not elaborated on what systems are aboard the balloons over the Tucson area, but Stanley said that systems like the ones Aerostar is developing could be used to deploy persistent surveillance systems, ultimately surveilling entire communities for days on end. The Thunderhead system boasts the ability to stay afloat for up to 30 days, and Aerostar has tested it along with its Zephyr platform, a new type of unmanned aircraft that also flies at high altitudes and has been tested in Arizona. That aircraft can stay in the air for up to two months. The balloon also could be carrying a variety of equipment, such as radar, lidar, GPS or cameras, Stanley said. While much of this equipment could be installed on a traditional aircraft, the balloon can stay afloat over an area at a higher altitude for longer durations, allowing for more persistent surveillance of an area, something that Stanley said can be a problem for everyday Americans. 'Following someone around for long periods of time reveals things about their life,' Stanley said. 'How often they go to the bar, associations, who they are hanging out with — and that is too much power for the government or anyone else to have over individuals.' SUPPORT: YOU MAKE OUR WORK POSSIBLE

Near, Skilled, and Experts in AI: Latin America's Tech Edge
Near, Skilled, and Experts in AI: Latin America's Tech Edge

Business Journals

time2 hours ago

  • Business Journals

Near, Skilled, and Experts in AI: Latin America's Tech Edge

Firms like Glofy are helping U.S. tech leaders build high-performing distributed teams with strategic alignment. As demand for top-tier developers soars, U.S. companies are re-evaluating their outsourcing playbooks. Attention is shifting from longtime hubs such as India and Eastern Europe toward Latin America, where time-zone alignment and cultural affinity complement deep technical talent. The region now boasts a fast-growing pool of specialists in AI, machine learning, and data science, fluent in North-American business norms and English. Industries tapping that talent range from healthcare, insurance, and government to venture-backed tech startups. Glofy fills roles in mainstream stacks: .NET, Python, React and, increasingly, in enterprise platforms like SAP and Microsoft Dynamics, matching the market's appetite for large-scale system expertise. 'Glofy gives us both the speed and domain depth a high-stakes sector demands,' says Nicholas, Director of Technology at a company pioneering AI-driven analytics for high-risk patients. 'Their developers arrive trained and industry-savvy, cutting our onboarding curve and letting us execute fast where it matters most.' How Glofy Keeps Quality High Beyond simple staff augmentation, Glofy runs a four-stage talent funnel: a calibrated code challenge, live pair-programming with a senior engineer, a soft-skills and English assessment, and a cultural-fit interview focused on North-American agile rituals. Fewer than 3% of applicants clear all stages. The result is a bench of bilingual specialists ready to slot into daily stand-ups, sprint reviews, and late-night incident calls without friction. Clients report ramp-up times trimmed by 40% and turnover rates well below regional averages metrics that translate into real velocity and cost certainty on complex roadmaps. 'Companies aren't just outsourcing tasks anymore, they're seeking integration, innovation, and velocity, all powered by AI and business insight,' notes Gonzalo Rosa, CEO of Glofy. With a vibrant tech ecosystem and surging AI focus, Latin America is no longer an alternative; it's the go-to region for scaling with vision and precision. Among the companies leading this shift, Glofy stands out as a quiet force driving growth with purpose.

Voyager wants to ride the defense tech wave to a $1.6 billion IPO
Voyager wants to ride the defense tech wave to a $1.6 billion IPO

Business Insider

time2 hours ago

  • Business Insider

Voyager wants to ride the defense tech wave to a $1.6 billion IPO

Voyager Technologies, a defense and space tech company, aims to raise up to $319 million in an initial public offering that could value it as high as $1.6 billion, the company said on Monday. Their filing underscores how defense and space tech companies are drawing renewed attention from DC and Silicon Valley. In his second inaugural address in January, President Donald Trump declared that "we will pursue our manifest destiny into the stars, launching American astronauts to plant the Stars and Stripes on the planet Mars." Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth is also bullish on how tech will change the battlefield. Private market defense investors are rallying behind such calls for modernization, while the Defense Department has created a new program to fund defense startups spinning out of college campuses. There's been some action in public markets, too: Kochav Defense Acquisition Corporation, a defense tech special-purpose acquisition company, completed its IPO in late May. IPOs have largely remained sluggish, though fintech companies Chime and Circle, and virtual physical therapy company Hinge Health have all recently gone public. Bankers say the window for going public is narrowing due to political and market volatility, so they're urging companies to move quickly toward an IPO while investor appetite lasts. Founded in 2019, Voyager is developing a low-Earth orbit commercial space station, Starlab, funded by over $200 million from NASA. The company is working with Airbus, Mitsubishi, MDA Space, and Palantir on the project. The company, initially called Voyager Space, dropped "Space" in a January rebrand to focus more on defense applications, like tech that improves the precision, speed, and reliability of missiles and defense interceptors. Voyager reported $34.5 million in net sales in the first quarter of 2025, up more than 14% from the same period last year. But its net losses in the quarter almost doubled, nearly hitting $27 million compared to just under $15 million a year ago, according to an SEC filing. Early Voyager investors include national security-focused firms Industrious Ventures, Marlinspike, and Scout Ventures. Morgan Stanley and JPMorgan are jointly leading the proposed offering. The company's shares, "VOYG," will trade on the New York Stock Exchange.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store