

Hacking Humans
N2K Networks
Deception, influence, and social engineering in the world of cyber crime.
Episodes
Mentioned books

Feb 19, 2026 • 46min
The voice on the other end.
This week, hosts Maria Varmazis (also host of the T-Minus Space Daily show), Dave Bittner and Joe Carrigan are discussing the latest in social engineering scams, phishing schemes, and criminal exploits that are making headlines. We have some follow up where Joe shares a scam call he received. Dave’s got the story on a sophisticated phishing campaign targeting Apple Pay users through fake emails and voice calls impersonating customer support, as well as Australia’s ClickFit initiative warning that romance scammers are exploiting trust online for emotional and financial gain. Joe’s story is about a former Ohio bank employee who used his insider access to steal identities and siphon roughly $2 million from elderly customers, ultimately leading to his arrest in Chicago and federal conviction. Maria’s story is about a daughter who discovers her 84-year-old mother has been financially exploited by trusted professionals and even family members, underscoring how elder fraud often comes from familiar faces. It highlights the rapid rise in elder financial abuse and the urgent need for families to step in early—before cognitive decline makes the losses irreversible. Our catch of the day come's from the "Australian Government" on a tax document being floated around.
Resources and links to stories:
Apple Pay Users Targeted by Sophisticated Phishing Scam Leveraging Voice and Email
ClickFit: Romance scams
Former Bank Employee Found Guilty of Targeting Elderly Victims in Identity Theft and Fraud Scheme
Ohio bank’s anti-fraud agent stole $2M from elderly customers: DOJ
Have a Catch of the Day you'd like to share? Email it to us at hackinghumans@n2k.com.

Feb 17, 2026 • 8min
Security Service Edge (SSE) (noun) [Word Notes]
Please enjoy this encore of Word Notes.
A security architecture that incorporates the cloud shared responsibility model, a vendor provided security stack, and network peering with one or more of the big content providers and their associated fiber networks.
CyberWire Glossary link: https://thecyberwire.com/glossary/security-service-edge
Audio reference link: Netskope (2022). What is Security Service Edge (SSE). YouTube. Available at: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Z9H84nvgBqw [Accessed 21 Oct. 2022].

Feb 12, 2026 • 1h 6min
Love was the hook.
This week, hosts Maria Varmazis (also host of the T-Minus Space Daily show), Dave Bittner and Joe Carrigan are discussing the latest in social engineering scams, phishing schemes, and criminal exploits that are making headlines. Dave sits down with Simon Horswell, a Senior Fraud Specialist at Entrust discussing evolving romance scams for Valentine's Day. We have some follow up on chickens and a listener write-in, with a quick note on the backyard chicken trend and a closer look at a Bank of America fraud text that looked like a phish. Maria’s story follows an alleged “Dubai Crown Prince” scam that drained nearly €3 million from a Romanian businesswoman using fake banks and humanitarian appeals. Joe’s story tells of a handyman-turned-boyfriend who ran multiple dating scams and stole from his partner and her family, now featured on Amazon Prime. Dave’s story features Simon Horswell from Entrust explaining why romance scams hit $4.5 billion in 2024 and how scammers use psychological tricks, AI tools, and celebrity impersonation to manipulate victims. We have two catches of the day this week, one a physical letter from the DOJ and the other is an email from Microsoft.
Resources and links to stories:
Let's stop shipping baby chickens in the mail
Inside the alleged $2.5 million Dubai Crown Prince romance scam
CASHED OUT I fell in love with a handyman who came to fix my kitchen – little did I know my fairytale would cost me £150k
Have a Catch of the Day you'd like to share? Email it to us at hackinghumans@n2k.com.

4 snips
Feb 10, 2026 • 8min
Domain spoofing (noun) [Word Notes]
A clear definition of domain spoofing and how attackers register lookalike URLs to impersonate real sites. A walkthrough of how spoof domains are used to trick people into actions. A real-world case about a bank-targeted spoof and the limits of defenses like SSL and DMARC. A cinematic example that compares movie deception to actual scams.

Feb 5, 2026 • 51min
Trust me, I’m legit.
This week, while Maria Varmazis (also host of the T-Minus Space Daily show) is out at a conference, hosts Dave Bittner and Joe Carrigan are joined by friend of the show Michele Kellerman, as they are sharing the latest in social engineering scams, phishing schemes, and criminal exploits that are making headlines. Our hosts start with some follow-up on Joe’s egg story, including his latest update and a brief detour into unexpected “big chicken news.” Joe’s story is on a massive USDA loan fraud scheme where Nikesh Patel fabricated fake government-backed farm loans, duped investment firms out of hundreds of millions of dollars, and continued running similar scams under aliases and even from prison, ultimately earning decades more in sentencing. Michele’s story is on a breaking report about the ShinyHunters group using targeted voice phishing and custom phishing kits to abuse Okta SSO, steal MFA credentials, and gain privileged access for data theft and extortion. Dave’s story is on LastPass warning users about an active phishing campaign impersonating the company, designed to steal master passwords and potentially expose all credentials stored in affected vaults. Our catch of the day comes from the Reddit, where two people we're approached by scammers through text messaging and both dealt with their scammers in different ways.
Resources and links to stories:
Sticky Fingers: USDA Fraudster Steals $200M in Stunning Scam
Formerly Married Couple Sentenced For Multi-Million Dollar Fraud Schemes
A new wave of ‘vishing’ attacks is breaking into SSO accounts in real time
LastPass Warns of Phishing Campaign Attempting to Steal Master Passwords
Have a Catch of the Day you'd like to share? Email it to us at hackinghumans@n2k.com.

Feb 3, 2026 • 40min
When legit is the trick: Phishing’s sneaky new moves. [OMITB]
Attackers are abusing legitimate Microsoft workflows to make phishing more convincing. They explain device code phishing where real OAuth flows hand over access tokens through QR or link lures. The show also covers misuse of Microsoft 365 Direct Send to make emails look internal. Discussion touches on red-team tooling releases and defensive steps like blocking flows and enforcing mail protections.

Feb 3, 2026 • 9min
Secure Web Gateway (noun) [Word Notes]
A lively refresher on secure web gateways and how Layer 7 firewalls enforce web security policies. A tour through firewall history from early research to next‑generation architectures and zero trust beginnings. Stories of early commercial firewalls and a real-world tale of a firewall stopping the Morris Worm. Notes on URL filtering, malware detection, and data loss prevention trends.

Jan 29, 2026 • 46min
Cold weather, hot scams.
Scammers exploit a Verizon outage to push fake credits and phish credentials. A rare big-money recovery story follows a woman who lost nearly $1 million to tech-support fraud. Fraudsters prey on Ozempic and GLP-1 demand with counterfeit pharmacies and deepfake ads. Winter brings utility impersonation scams using urgent shutoff threats and unusual payment requests.

Jan 27, 2026 • 7min
Indicators of Compromise (noun) [Word Notes]
Clear definition of digital traces that show a system or network was breached. A look at early IOC practices like IPs and hashes and why they often failed. How MITRE ATT&CK and TTPs improved prediction by focusing on attacker behavior. An analogy using Sherlock demonstrates how multiple clues combine to reveal the true pattern.

Jan 22, 2026 • 47min
Scammers gonna scam.
This week, hosts Dave Bittner, Joe Carrigan, and Maria Varmazis (also host of the T-Minus Space Daily show) are sharing the latest in social engineering scams, phishing schemes, and criminal exploits that are making headlines. Joe share's another chicken update for us, this time from Werner Herzog. Dave’s got a story from a listener named Tim, an IRS Criminal Investigation agent, who explains that real CI agents may contact people unannounced and can verify themselves in person, but if anyone asks for gift cards or crypto, it’s definitely a scam. Maria has the story on how attackers are abusing real SendGrid accounts to send politically charged phishing emails that look legitimate and trick users into handing over their credentials. Joe has two stories this week, the first on Cambodia’s renewed crackdown on massive Southeast Asian scam networks following the arrest and extradition of alleged kingpin Chen Zhi, signaling deeper international cooperation against fraud operations that have stolen billions worldwide, and the second on a Nashville Uber driver who lost $300 after falling for a convincing phone scam that impersonated Uber Support and falsely accused him of drunk driving. Our catch of the day comes from Reddit scams where one scammer gets put through the ringer, twice.
Resources and links to stories:
Cambodia to keep up crackdown on scam centres after arrest of alleged mastermind
Uber driver describes drunk driving scam that cost him $300
SendGrid isn’t emailing you about ICE or BLM. It’s a phishing attack.
Dave Part 1
Have a Catch of the Day you'd like to share? Email it to us at hackinghumans@n2k.com.


