Demand for EVs has gone glacial, and one automaker after another is running aground: General Motors threw $7.6 billion overboard. Ford washed $19.5 billion off its books. Leave it to Stellantis to face the most titanic charge yet, a $26.5 billion bill for its own misplaced bet on EVs.
Technology
A SWAT team stormed my house
February 16th started like any typical Friday night. My husband and I decided to stay home, grill chicken and make a salad for dinner. At about 6:45 p.m., we heard some loud rumbling overhead.
We walked onto the back patio, and two police helicopters were overhead — shining lights all over our property, and a recording echoed, “Police. You are under arrest. Stay right there and I won’t shoot you.”
As I looked across the fence, a swarm of armed members of the Phoenix SWAT Team with a few dogs were circling our property. One of the guys said, “Yeah, there’s a jammer right here.” He picked it up. I leaned over the patio and asked, “What’s going on?”
The police told me to go inside
TECH SECURITY TO-DO: LOCK DOWN YOUR SMART STUFF
A SWAT member said, “Ma’am, A South American gang is targeting homes to steal from. The jammer says you might have been next. Do we have permission to enter your property?” I said, “Yes!” and then he asked something like, “If we find anyone, will you pursue charges so we can arrest them?” I replied, “Of course!”
I opened the driveway gates to our property and the guest house while Barry tossed the police keys to open the security gates. It turns out that when the gang saw we were home, they likely diverted their attention to the house next door. A house four doors down from us wasn’t so lucky.
The homeowner left at 5 p.m. to have dinner and got a notification his security cameras were offline at 5:05 pm. He thought the internet went down. The gang broke in and took $25,000 in cash and valuables worth $100,000. They were in and out in less than 10 minutes.
How are they getting away with this?
The gang places cellular and Wi-Fi jammers around the homes they’re targeting. This way, security cameras and phones are useless. A Phoenix police officer told me the gang probably noticed nothing was down in our house.
Our home’s security cameras and internet are hard-wired. Even when the thieves tried to jam the Wi-Fi signals, the security camera’s red lights showed they were recording everything. We also still have a landline.
But how frightening is that? Your phone doesn’t work. Your cameras aren’t recording anything. On the upside, the gang doesn’t carry guns. If they get caught, they’ll spend about six months in jail before being extradited back to Chile.
If you’d like to watch the action captured by my security cameras, I showed them during a Kim Komando Today video stream. I am so thankful for our police force.
Nothing is random
The gang thoroughly scopes out homes beforehand. They drive the neighborhood and look up homes on real estate sites to get an idea of where the primary bedroom is located. They look for dogs, too.
7 THINGS YOU SHOULD NEVER ASK SIRI, GOOGLE ASSISTANT OR ALEXA
It’s not only a problem in Phoenix. This is happening all over the country. A friend was robbed by a similar gang in a guard-gated community in California. Kudos to Phoenix Police — they arrested three members of the gang who were in my neighborhood that night.
Invest in tech
We built our home, so it was easy to install the wiring for the internet and almost everything connected to it for the fastest connection that also won’t be susceptible to a jammer. Of course, you can hardwire after construction, but that’s costly and often unrealistic. Here are some options:
- Wireless cameras go kaput with no signal. Try a wired camera for backup.
- A cam with SD card storage is nice, too, because it’ll still record if there’s no Wi-Fi.
- Put up motion-activated lights. It makes it harder for anyone to sneak around.
- A femtocell (think of it as a mini cell tower) could be enough to keep your connection if thieves drop jammers outside — T-Mobile or Verizon.
- Have an Amazon Echo? Away mode lets you control lights so it looks like the house is occupied.
- This innovative gadget makes it look like someone’s watching TV at your house when you’re not there.
- Put security signs on your property. Here are two for $7.99.
Get your house offline
Check Zillow, Realtor.com and Redfin for photos of your house. The more crooks know about the layout, the better for them. Here’s how to remove those pics.
Zillow
- Go to zillow.com/sellerlanding/claimyourhome and type in your address. Verify you’re the legal owner by selecting your name from the drop-down list.
- Click the profile icon and select Your Home from the menu option. Click on the tile for your home, then Edit Facts from the Owner View of the property page.
- Click the X in the corner of the photo or click on an individual photo and Remove Photo. To remove all images, click Delete all photos. Hit Save Changes.
Realtor
- Go to realtor.com/myhome, type in your address and click Claim Your Home on your home’s profile page.
- Log into your profile and go to your owner dashboard under the My Home tab. Click the Remove Photos button.
Redfin
- After creating an account and claiming your home, you can make changes from your Owner Dashboard.
- Log into Redfin and go to your Owner Dashboard using the drop-down menu under your name in the top-right corner of the page.
- Click on your home and Edit Photos, then Hide listing photos. Click Yes, Hide Photos when it pops up.
You’re not done yet. It’s a good idea to blur your house from Google Maps and Apple Maps while you’re at it.
SIGNS YOU NEED A NEW PHONE, LIKE, NOW
PODCAST PICK: Budget Ozempic, avoid return fees & online piracy amps up
Plus, we’re TikTok tips that pros warn are your plants’ worst nightmare. Andrew has a wild story about getting scammed on a dating app. It’s cold outside, so here are some top tricks for staying warm with your tech. And, as always, listener letters. You won’t believe what one guy called me.
Check out my podcast “Kim Komando Today” on Apple, Google Podcasts, Spotify, or your favorite podcast player.
Listen to the podcast here or wherever you get your podcasts. Just search for my last name, “Komando.”
Sound like a tech pro, even if you’re not! Award-winning popular host Kim Komando is your secret weapon. Listen on 425+ radio stations or get the podcast. And join over 400,000 people who get her free 5-minute daily email newsletter.
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Technology
Stellantis is in a crisis of its own making
The Jeep, Dodge, and Chrysler parent company hasn’t said how much of that unfathomable sum is explicitly due to EV losses, as the write-down wiped away about 25 percent of the company’s stock value overnight. Every automaker faces the same cooling EV demand and whipsawing political climate, yet Stellantis appears the most exposed, due in part to longstanding failures to keep up with evolving tech or consumer tastes. Don’t forget quality. An additional $16.7 billion charge for warranty and recall claims, including a recall of 320,000 Jeep 4xe plug-in hybrids for battery-fire risks, adds insult to financial injury.
The names may change — Stellantis, Fiat Chrysler, DaimlerChrysler, Chrysler Corp. — but the company stays frustratingly familiar. It’s the slightly off-key sister in the Motown trio. It’s an automaker enamored of the quick fix, the low-hanging fruit.
In America, that low-hanging fruit tends to come in bunches of eight, with Hemi V8s below the hood of a thirsty pickup, SUV, or muscle car. Now it’s déjà vu all over again. Stellantis plans to ship 100,000 Hemi engines from its Saltillo, Mexico, factory in 2026, tripling output to power Ram 1500 pickups, Jeep Wranglers, and other models. For now, the demand appears there, and executives intend to give the people what they want.
During an analysts’ call last year, Stellantis CEO Antonio Filosa said the so-called Big Beautiful Bill — making sure to give President Trump credit — allows the company “more flexibility in choosing… a mix between ICE and electric versions that we sell. And this will mean, to us, a lot of additional profit.”
After a bad EV bet, automakers hope for an ICE winning streak
It’s hard to blame automakers for wanting to make back these brutal EV losses. Like GM, Ford, or Toyota, Stellantis is forecasting a financial windfall from the Trump administration’s blank check on pollution and mileage rules. But the pendulum will inevitably swing, and if this automaker doesn’t invest in affordable passenger cars and tech, it’s going to get its head lopped off.
Certainly, Stellantis’ EVs weren’t getting it done in America. The hunky Dodge Charger Daytona was a valiant-but-failed attempt at updating Mopar muscle for an electric age. Dodge was forced to add a gasoline version. A half-baked Jeep Wagoneer S EV, at more than $70,000 with options, fell flat in showrooms. The 2026 Jeep Recon is the company’s next shot at luring Tesla Model Y buyers, though the Mexico-built SUV will also start from $67,000, and with no $7,500 consumer tax credit to soften the blow.
The names may change — Stellantis, Fiat Chrysler, DaimlerChrysler, Chrysler Corp. — but the company stays frustratingly familiar
Those models aren’t what the Trump administration has in mind to “assist” the industry, as it locks fuel-economy and emissions rules into a time machine, seemingly bound for the Eisenhower administration. A yearlong spree against regulations culminated with last week’s killing of the “endangerment finding,” the historic ruling that required the Environmental Protection Agency to regulate greenhouse gases as a threat to public health and safety.
Automakers will no longer face fines for failing to meet tailpipe pollution or fuel-economy standards. They will no longer be required to buy pricey climate credits from the likes of Tesla, or spend billions developing EVs that weren’t boosting the bottom line.
In the face of such regulatory monkey business, the Detroit Three are naturally tempted to play see no evil, hear no evil. Automakers are free to make whatever cars they like, at least until the next sheriff rides into Washington. “Choice” is their new mantra. Unsurprisingly, their choice is to make hay and haul it in fossil-fueled SUVs and pickup trucks that generate virtually all its profits.
Washington insists this is all about making cars more affordable. That includes a vindictive axing of fuel-saving stop/start technology, which the EPA calculated was trimming owners’ gasoline bills between 7.3 and 26.4 percent. (Wait, doesn’t gasoline cost money?) And it’s precisely those feature-stuffed trucks and SUVs that drove the price of the average new car past $50,000 in the first place. Today’s cheap gasoline also encourages automakers to party now and pay later. Longer memories will recall the old Chrysler getting caught with its pants down whenever fuel prices spiked, its showrooms overflowing with unsold, guzzling trucks. Churlish types may even recall Chrysler’s 2009 bankruptcy and subsequent federal bailout.
Still Top-Heavy with Trucks
Like its automaking peers, Stellantis insists it won’t walk away from EVs. But it remains more reliant on trucks and SUVs than any rival. Stellantis would at least try to own its area of expertise. Yet sales of its bread-and-butter Ram pickup, after briefly nosing past the mighty Ford F-150, have fallen off a cliff. Sure, some of that drop came from Ram’s controversial decision to drop a V-8 in favor of a more-efficient “Hurricane” inline V-6. But it’s more related to the botched rollout of a redesigned 2025 Ram, with production bottlenecks, quality glitches, and the elimination of an affordable “Classic” model in favor of moneymakers like the $87,000 Tungsten edition.
Try this for market malpractice: Prior to the launch of the 2026 Jeep Cherokee, a critical hybrid SUV that revives a storied Jeep nameplate, Stellantis didn’t even have a straight-up rival for the Toyota RAV4, Honda CR-V, or other wildly popular compact SUVs. (The Jeep Compass is much smaller and not up for that fight).
“That’s really where the market is, and the Koreans and Japanese are all over those segments,” says Tom Libby, director of industry analysis for S&P Global Mobility.
Like its automaking peers, Stellantis insists it won’t walk away from EVs. But it remains more reliant on trucks and SUVs than any rival
Compact SUVs are one of 33 market segments, by S&P’s count, yet those models account for 21 percent of all US sales. Stellantis, in effect, “was only competing in four-fifths of the market,” Libby says.
A revolving door of management hasn’t helped. Filosa is the latest CEO following the abrupt resignation of Carlos Tavares in December 2024, with Tavares facing pressure from all sides. Dealers, suppliers, the UAW, key shareholders, and the managing board were in near-revolt over slumping sales and Tavares’ relentless cost-cutting. Like a perpetually rebuilding sports franchise, each new company chief arrives with high hopes and fresh strategies, then gets replaced before he or she can see it through.
“You can’t keep changing course and expect things to improve,” Libby says.
In Europe, Stellantis’ Peugeot and Citroen brands were doing solid EV sales. Now the EU is watering down an EV mandate for 2035. So Stellantis plans to resurrect diesel engines in at least seven European models. Some analysts see this as smart business, with Chinese automakers having no diesels to sell. But this is also Stellantis at its blast-from-the-past best. In Europe, diesels have fallen from more than half the market in 2015 to 7.7 percent today. EVs are at nearly 20 percent and rising fast, driven by the arrival of Chinese models from BYD and others.

Image: Stellantis
Too Many Brands, Not Enough Stars
Notoriously, Stellantis has too many underperforming brands, with 14 core outfits including a superfluous Lancia, Vauxhall, and DS in Europe. (I’ll leave Maserati off that list, hoping this once-glorious brand can survive). By this point, a boss-baby CEO would realize he has too many toys to play with. Yet each new chief has resisted making tough calls on which brands to cut loose. As brands such as Chrysler wither, executives publicly proclaim their love and commitment, only to neglect them.
Attempts to reestablish Fiat and Alfa Romeo in America were noble, especially for enthusiasts who crave some la dolce vita in their cars. But Alfa Romeo sold 5,600 cars here last year and a paltry 1,300 for Fiat. Sorry, but the experiment has failed. And despite having seven brands in America, none is the kind of mainstream anchor provided by GM’s Chevrolet, Ford, Toyota, or Honda.
Yet for all that, Stellantis doesn’t have a mainstream domestic car brand to take on Toyota, Honda, or Hyundai. It doesn’t have a high-margin luxury brand akin to Cadillac, whose thriving EV sales (prior to the kibosh on consumer credits) saw it pass a stumbling Audi in the US luxury ranks.
“You can’t keep changing course and expect things to improve.”
— Tom Libby, director of industry analysis for S&P Global Mobility
Things hit bottom in August, when Stellantis’ share of the US retail market reached a record-low 5.4-percent, according to S&P Global. The company has begun to turn things around, with retail share rising to 6.3 percent in November. But after shedding market share to Toyota or Honda for decades, the company is now losing it to Hyundai and Kia, whose sales have exploded. Not coincidentally, those Korean brands have invested in full lineups that encompass affordable sedans, SUVs, and smartly designed EVs.
One ominous number illustrates the depth of the problem. Stellantis’ percentage of repeat customers, which S&P calls its manufacturer loyalty measure, sunk to around 41 percent in August, before recovering to 47 percent for the fourth quarter. In other words, fewer than half of current owners are buying another Stellantis model, and that’s with seven brands to choose from. Among automakers that offer at least two brands here, only Volkswagen was lower at 44 percent.
At GM, a healthy 66 percent of owners end up buying another GM model, followed by Toyota and Ford at a respective 64 and 61 percent. That loyalty has become a critical indicator of long-term success, as a growing number of automakers fight over a limited (or shrinking) pie of new-car buyers. The winners are those who can steal customers from rivals, win over younger generations, and ideally keep them for life.
Can Stellantis Turn Things Around?
The frustrating part is that Stellantis, when it’s on its game, can deliver compelling cars and trucks, full of charm and personality.
The plush-and-powerful Ram. The Jeep Wrangler, which experienced a massive sales renaissance as Americans rediscovered the joys of authentic off-roaders. The Dodge Challenger and its Hellcat and Demon offshoots. The overlooked Maserati GranTurismo Folgore, a sweet-driving, 202-mph electric indulgence that makes a Lucid look like a Hertz rental.
Stellantis has little choice but to lean into its traditional customer base for now. But Stellantis must keep investing in electrification and other advanced tech, before the winds change again. Chinese EVs already have a foothold in Europe and a coming toehold in Canada and will inevitably blow into America as well.
The Ram 1500 REV pickup, serially delayed, remains an intriguing tech play. This type of “extended range electric vehicle,” or EREV, uses an ICE engine solely to generate electricity for a battery, which then efficiently powers the wheels. With much longer electric ranges than today’s plug-in hybrids, and the ability to fill a gas tank when needed, EREVs could prove popular with Americans who are leery over EV range or long charging times. Ram says the REV can cover 145 miles on plug-in electricity alone, with 690 miles of total range.
Filosa intends to revitalize a near-dormant Chrysler brand, including an actual sedan (possibly electric) based on the Halcyon concept, and perhaps a sporty small car priced below $30,000. The company is also readying a demo fleet of Charger Daytonas, powered by semi-solid-state batteries — from the Massachusetts-based Factorial Energy — that helped a lightly modified Mercedes EQS sedan cover 749 miles from Stuttgart to Sweden, with 85 miles of range to spare.
If Stellantis can get in on the ground floor of crazy-ranging, rapid-charging solid-state batteries, it and other homegrown automakers could leapfrog the best lithium-ion technology in all of China. Stellantis would be viewed as a tech leader, not a follower. Show them 500 miles of range and a 15-minute charge, and EV fans might consider a Dodge, Chrysler, or Ram for the first time in their lives. Don’t laugh. Remember how Tesla was going to drive every legacy automaker out of business? The clock may be ticking on Stellantis, but it’s not too late to change.
Technology
YouTube TV billing scam emails are hitting inboxes
NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!
An email arrived that looked like a routine billing alert for YouTube TV Premium. Near the top, it displayed “BILLING FAILED” in capital letters. Below that, the message claimed the payment was declined and urged immediate action to keep streaming. This email was sent to us by Jackie from New York, NY, who immediately knew something was wrong.
“I’m not a YouTube TV Premium subscriber so I knew right away this was a scam. So why am I receiving these emails?”
That question matters. If a billing alert references a service you do not use, it is almost always a scam. The email still appeared legitimate. Billing notices like this are common, and scammers rely on that familiarity to slip past quick checks.
Another warning sign appeared in the sender’s details. The message was routed through a domain with no connection to Google or YouTube. That mismatch confirmed what Jackie already suspected.
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TAX SEASON SCAMS 2026: FAKE IRS MESSAGES STEALING IDENTITIES
Cybersecurity experts warn that billing emails from domains unrelated to Google or YouTube are a major red flag. (Photo by S3studio/Getty Images)
Why this scam feels so convincing
Scammers understand behavior. People skim emails. They react quickly when access to familiar services feels threatened. This message uses recognizable branding, clean formatting and simple language. It also assumes the recipient already subscribes. That assumption is intentional. These emails go out in bulk, knowing some recipients really do have YouTube TV and may act before verifying.
Urgency language is meant to push for quick action
Scam emails rely on pressure. This one uses several subtle cues.
‘BILLING FAILED’ draws immediate focus
Capital letters pull attention to the problem first. It feels like a system notice, even though no real account check took place.
‘Fix your payment now to keep streaming’ creates momentum
That line suggests access could stop at any moment. Scammers know interruptions feel urgent, so they push fast decisions.
‘Status: Payment declined’ sounds technical
The word status makes the message feel automated and official. In reality, scammers use vague labels because they cannot see real billing data.
‘Date: Today’ adds time pressure
Including today makes the issue feel current and unresolved. Legitimate companies rarely demand same-day action through email links alone.
When urgency replaces clarity, that pressure itself becomes the warning sign.
ROBINHOOD TEXT SCAM WARNING: DO NOT CALL THIS NUMBER
Scam emails mimicking YouTube TV billing notices use urgent language and fake support buttons to steal login and payment details. (Robert Michael/picture alliance via Getty Images)
Red flags hiding in plain sight
The layout of the email matters as much as the wording.
“Confirm billing” buttons are designed to prompt clicks
The red CONFIRM BILLING button encourages action before verification. Real companies usually direct users to sign in normally, not through a single email button.
“Contact support” links can be misleading
The black CONTACT SUPPORT button looks official and helpful. In scam emails, these links often lead to fake support pages or phishing forms.
Color and design influence behavior
Red suggests urgency. Dark colors suggest authority. Familiar branding builds comfort. Together, they encourage quick action.
If an email pushes any button to fix a problem, pause and verify first.
The biggest red flag most people miss
The message claims to be about YouTube TV. The sending infrastructure points somewhere else. Lifeheaters.com has no legitimate relationship with Google or YouTube. Billing emails should always come from official domains tied directly to the company.
We reached out to Google, YouTube’s parent company, and a spokesperson told us, “We can confirm that this is a phishing scam and not an official communication from YouTube.”
How to protect yourself from YouTube TV billing email scams
If you receive a billing alert like this, pause before acting. Scammers rely on speed and stress. These steps help you stay in control.
1) Go straight to the official website or app
Instead of clicking links in the email, open a new browser tab. Then go directly to the official YouTube TV website or app. Real billing issues always appear inside your account dashboard.
2) Check billing inside your account settings
Once you are logged in, review your payment status. If there is a real problem, you will see it there. If everything looks normal, the email is fake.
3) Inspect links before you click
Hover your cursor over any link in the email. Look closely at the destination. If the domain does not clearly match Google or YouTube, do not click it. That mismatch is a major warning sign. Also, installing strong antivirus software adds a critical layer of protection. It can block malicious links, flag phishing pages and stop malware before it installs. That matters if you accidentally click the wrong thing. The best way to protect yourself from malicious links that install malware and potentially access your private information is to have strong antivirus software installed on all your devices. This protection can also alert you to phishing emails and ransomware scams, keeping your personal information and digital assets safe.
Get my picks for the best 2026 antivirus protection winners for your Windows, Mac, Android & iOS devices at Cyberguy.com.
4) Act fast if you already clicked
If you clicked the link or entered information, respond quickly. Change your Google password right away. Consider using a password manager to securely store and generate complex passwords, reducing the risk of password reuse. Then review recent account activity and payment methods for any suspicious activity.
Next, see if your email has been exposed in past breaches. Our No. 1 password manager pick includes a built-in breach scanner that checks whether your email address or passwords have appeared in known leaks. If you discover a match, immediately change any reused passwords and secure those accounts with new, unique credentials.
Check out the best expert-reviewed password managers of 2026 at Cyberguy.com.
5) Remove your data from data broker sites
Scammers often target people using leaked personal data. A data removal service helps reduce how much of your information is floating around online. Less exposed data means fewer targeted scam attempts.
While no service can guarantee the complete removal of your data from the internet, a data removal service is really a smart choice. They aren’t cheap, and neither is your privacy. These services do all the work for you by actively monitoring and systematically erasing your personal information from hundreds of websites. It’s what gives me peace of mind and has proven to be the most effective way to erase your personal data from the internet. By limiting the information available, you reduce the risk of scammers cross-referencing data from breaches with information they might find on the dark web, making it harder for them to target you.
Check out my top picks for data removal services and get a free scan to find out if your personal information is already out on the web by visiting Cyberguy.com.
Get a free scan to find out if your personal information is already out on the web: Cyberguy.com.
6) Watch for sender domains that do not match
Legitimate companies send billing emails from their own domains. A message about YouTube TV should never route through an unrelated site like lifeheaters.com. That disconnect alone is enough to walk away.
7) Never update payment info through email links
Scammers want your login details or credit card number. Avoid giving them either. Always update billing information directly inside your account, not through an email prompt.
HOW TO SAFELY VIEW YOUR BANK AND RETIREMENT ACCOUNTS ONLINE
Google confirmed a YouTube TV “billing failed” email routed through an unrelated domain was a phishing scam. (Jakub Porzycki/NurPhoto via Getty Images)
Kurt’s key takeaways
This email looked polished. The message felt urgent. The branding felt familiar. Yet one small detail gave it away. Billing emails should always come from official domains and verified accounts. When they do not, trust your instincts and verify independently. Pausing for ten seconds can save you weeks of cleanup.
Have you received a billing or subscription email that looked real but turned out to be fake? What tipped you off? Let us know your thoughts by writing to us at Cyberguy.com.
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Technology
Xbox shakeup: Phil Spencer and Sarah Bond are leaving Microsoft
After nearly 40 years at Microsoft, Xbox chief and Microsoft Gaming CEO Phil Spencer is leaving the company, along with Xbox president Sarah Bond. Spencer’s retirement was announced in a memo from Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella on February 20th, stating, “Last year, Phil Spencer made the decision to retire from the company, and since then we’ve been talking about succession planning.”
Follow along below for the latest updates on Microsoft’s Xbox leadership changes
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