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New Phishing Campaign Spreads Via LinkedIn Comments

A widespread phishing campaign is targeting LinkedIn users by posting comments on users’ posts, BleepingComputer reports.

Threat actors are using bots to post the comments, which impersonate LinkedIn itself and inform the user that their account has been restricted due to policy violations. The comments contain links to supposedly allow the user to appeal the restriction.

Your KnowBe4 Fresh Compliance Plus Content Updates from December 2025

β€œGave me good things to consider that I had not thought about as we move forward and AI becomes a part of our work processes!”

Mobile-First Module
Employees master current cyberthreats β€” phishing, ransomware, BEC, AI-powered social engineering and deepfakes β€” through case studies and interactive exercises, empowering them to recognize, report and prevent attacks.

Your KnowBe4 Fresh Content Updates from December 2025

β€œIt was really good. I liked that it covered a lot of important subjects, focused on how to spot red flags, and used an AI deepfake demonstration.”

Training Module
Employees master current cyberthreats β€” phishing, ransomware, BEC, AI-powered social engineering and deepfakes β€” through case studies and interactive exercises, empowering them to recognize, report and prevent attacks.

When Seeing Isn’t Believing: AI Images, Breaking News and the New Misinformation Playbook

In the early hours following reports of a U.S. military operation involving Venezuela, social media feeds were flooded with dramatic images and videos that appeared to show the capture of Venezuelan president NicolΓ‘s Maduro. Within minutes, AI-generated photos of Maduro being escorted by U.S. law enforcement, scenes of missiles striking Caracas, and crowds celebrating in the streets racked up millions of views across various social media channels.

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