b'2022 Post WPMAEXPOEDUCATIONAL SessionFrank AbagnaleSince 2013, losses to these types of crimes have topped(pages that show up when you use a over $12 billion. In your office, be cautious of differentsearch engine); 90-50% is the deep web locations that are cyber soft spots. Out of office messages,(pages you need a password to access and loss of thumb drives, employees unwittingly hacked orthat cannot be found by popular search gullible to phishing emails, photos/scanned images of workengines; and .01% is the dark web (sites documents, and social-media posts with valuable informa- that provide anonymity to users and go tion/intel. In 2015, 30% of data breaches were a result oflargely unregulated).employee error. Finally, Frank outlined the dangers of Other office hacks came from vulnerable access points inold computers and printers that contain smart buildings through camera systems; heating, ventila- hard drives, the value of efficient shred-tion and air conditioning (HVAC); fire/life/safety systems;ders, the importance of freezing your elevators and escalators; lighting systems; internet-con- credit and credit monitoring. Know the nected coffee machines, printers; Wi-Fi networks; buildingdifference between Debit and management and control systems; audio-visual systemsCredit cardsyou should only (smart television, smart whiteboards, conference-roomuse credit (its a win both ways.) equipment); digital signage equipment (e.g. kiosks withFrank noted that the cartels have digital displays); and parking systems. At home its thebetter technology now than the connected thermostats, cameras, smart TVs and gamingfederal government. Between consoles; iOS, Android/Smart tables and phones; and unemployment insurance claims, computers (Mac and Windows).PPP loans and the Covid relief Compromised user passwords were 63% of network intrusions, payments, over $400 billion in and 81% of hacking-related breaches involved weak orfraud was perpetrated against stolen passwords. The average consumer manages overthe U.S. Government, with 70% 191 pairs of usernames and passwords. You can buy logingoing outside the country. He also touched on financial credentials to someones bank or Uber account on the darkexploitation of seniors; reports of social media scams/fraud web for as little as $7. The top three major banks in thesoaring over the last five years; romance scams; check U.S. spend over $100 million resetting passwords in theirforgeries; signatures and prismatic printing. call centers or an average of $70 per incident. AbagnaleAll in all, be it at work, at home, or as you travel, be proac-recommended using a no password technology. Banks whotive in your protection of your identity and information, changed to no password technology saw their fraud ratesaim towards prevention, ensure verification, and continuallydrop from 3.3% to 0.68%, a reduction of 78%.seek education. Frank Abagnale educated us in all these Frank also encouraged us to think twice about what we postareasit was an outstanding presentation!! Son social media. About 60% of the information needed to craft a great phishing scam is found on Instagram alone. Hackers use AI to scan social media accounts at incredible speeds. Stop sharing your work email address. Sanitize your online information, vet people before ac-cepting requests. A Facebook post may cost you a job, as 70% of employers review social media sites to assess job candidates, and 54% have rejected candidates after finding objectionable material. The Internet is an ocean of information; only 4-10% is at the surface of the web WPMA News / Spring 202215'