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Your phone is now a crime scene in your pocket

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Your phone is now a crime scene in your pocket

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Take a second and look at your phone. It knows where you slept last night. Who you texted. What you searched. Where you drove.

For investigators, that information can turn into evidence fast. In fact, a major new survey found smartphones now show up in almost every criminal investigation.

In other words, your phone can become the primary crime scene. And that should get your attention.

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Detectives say smartphones act as “a crime scene in your pocket,” storing messages, GPS history and payment records. (Anna Barclay/Getty Images)

Why smartphones have become the center of crime investigations

Your phone is always with you. It logs:

  • Text messages and chats
  • Photos and videos
  • GPS location history
  • App activity
  • Call logs
  • Payment records

According to the 2026 Industry Trends Report from Cellebrite, a digital forensics company that provides tools to law enforcement and investigators, smartphones are now the most cited source of digital evidence in criminal cases at 97%. The report shows that mobile data can reveal where a person has been, who they communicate with and patterns of daily life.

For that reason, many in law enforcement now describe the smartphone as “a crime scene in your pocket” to illustrate how deeply these devices factor into investigations. That phrase may sound dramatic. It is not. It reflects how investigations now unfold in the U.S. and around the world. In many criminal cases, phone data regularly helps:

  • Reconstruct timelines using cell site and GPS data
  • Place suspects near crime scenes
  • Confirm or contradict alibis
  • Recover deleted messages
  • Track digital payments

Police agencies have testified in court that smartphone extractions help establish sequences of events faster than traditional methods. Modern policing no longer relies only on fingerprints and surveillance footage. It often begins with digital footprints.

Real cases where phone data made the difference

This is happening in courtrooms right now. Case in point, in the prosecutions tied to the Gilgo Beach serial killings in New York, investigators leaned heavily on burner phone data, cell site records and digital communications to link the suspect to victims. Mobile records helped narrow movements, connect devices and support key search warrants.

In the ongoing University of Idaho murder case, prosecutors have relied on smartphone location data, digital mapping history and phone activity logs to build a timeline. Location records helped place the suspect’s phone near the crime scene during critical time windows.

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Fraud investigations across the U.S. tell a similar story. In large-scale romance scams and crypto investment schemes, law enforcement now uses smartphone chat logs, transaction screenshots and crypto wallet trails to follow the money. Cryptocurrency evidence appears in a growing share of cases as online scams surge.

The pattern is clear. Phone data can protect the innocent by confirming where someone was. It can also reveal intent through messages, searches and digital payments.

Here is what matters most for everyday Americans. Even if you are not committing a crime, your phone creates a detailed and often lasting record of your life. And in today’s justice system, that record carries real weight.

BRYAN KOHBERGER’S PHONE RECORDS REVEAL PANICKED SEARCHES AFTER POLICE UNCOVERED KEY DETAIL

Bryan Kohberger appears at the Ada County Courthouse in Boise, Idaho, on July 23, 2025, for sentencing in the University of Idaho murders case, where prosecutors relied heavily on cellphone location data and digital evidence. (Kyle Green-Pool/Getty Images)

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The rise of crypto and AI in criminal cases

The report revealed another important trend. Cryptocurrency is now the fastest-growing source of evidence. Investigators cited crypto data in 22% of cases, largely due to the explosion of online scams and fraud. If you have followed ransomware attacks or crypto investment scams, this makes sense. Payments leave blockchain trails. Law enforcement increasingly follows the money.

Meanwhile, 65% of detectives believe AI tools can speed up investigations. A typical case can require up to 35 hours of digital review. About 60% of that time goes to sorting and evaluating data. That creates pressure. And pressure can lead to mistakes.

Experts warn that generative AI can deliver convincing but inaccurate results if no one double-checks them.

The hidden bottlenecks behind digital evidence

The report also highlights challenges investigators face behind the scenes. More than half of devices arrive locked. Many investigators report difficulty accessing iOS and Android phones due to constant software updates and encryption. Most teams still review evidence manually. Only a small share of users use advanced analytical tools to connect data across devices and cases. On top of that, agency leaders say training gaps and rising data volume are slowing investigations and stretching resources. As digital evidence grows, so do the pressure points inside the system.

What this means for you

Here is the part most people miss. Even if you never plan to break the law, your phone can:

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  • Place you at a location
  • Show who you were with
  • Reveal what you searched
  • Expose private conversations
  • Document your purchases

Sometimes that helps you. It can prove an alibi. It can clear your name. Other times, it raises serious privacy questions. Who has access to your data? How long is it stored? How securely is it handled?

In most criminal investigations, law enforcement must obtain a warrant or other court-approved legal process to access the contents of your phone. But the sheer volume of data these devices hold has exploded. And that changes the stakes.

Smartphone data and the growing privacy debate

We live in an era where digital evidence is the backbone of modern justice. That helps solve crimes. It protects victims. It speeds up investigations. But it also means the device in your pocket contains a map of your life.

As smartphone digital evidence becomes central to 97% of cases, we need to ask hard questions about privacy, oversight and AI accuracy. Because once data exists, it can be used.

5 SIMPLE TECH TIPS TO IMPROVE DIGITAL PRIVACY

Smartphones now appear in 97% of criminal investigations, with law enforcement relying on mobile data to reconstruct timelines and track suspects. (Boris Roessler/picture alliance via Getty Images)

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Tech tips: Protect your digital footprint

You cannot eliminate your digital trail. But you can reduce unnecessary exposure.

1) Review location settings

Turn off constant location access for apps that do not need it. On iPhone and Android, set most apps to “While Using” instead of “Always.”

2) Use encrypted messaging

Apps like Signal and WhatsApp use end-to-end encryption, which means messages are scrambled so only you and the recipient can read them. Apple’s iMessage also uses end-to-end encryption for conversations between Apple devices. Strong encryption protects your messages from hackers and data breaches. It is also why law enforcement often cannot read message content without access to the physical device. Keep in mind that encryption protects message content, not everything around it. Metadata such as who you contacted and when may still exist.

3) Lock down cloud backups

Check whether your messages and photos back up to the cloud. Cloud data can become part of investigations.

4) Enable strong authentication

Use a long passcode, not a simple four-digit PIN. Turn on biometric security and two-factor authentication (2FA).

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5) Think before you search

Search history, voice assistant queries and in-app messages often live longer than you expect.

6) Keep your phone updated

Security updates patch vulnerabilities that criminals exploit. They also protect your data from being stolen in breaches.

Take my quiz: How safe is your online security?

Think your devices and data are truly protected? Take this quick quiz to see where your digital habits stand. From passwords to Wi-Fi settings, you’ll get a personalized breakdown of what you’re doing right and what needs improvement. Take my Quiz here: Cyberguy.com.

Kurt’s key takeaways

Your phone is no longer just a communication tool. It is a timeline, a diary and a witness. For law enforcement, that is powerful. For you, it is a reminder that convenience comes with consequences. The next time you tap “Allow” on a permissions request, remember this. You are not just installing an app. You are adding another entry to your digital twin.

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If your phone tells the story of your life, who should control that story when it matters most? Let us know by writing to us at Cyberguy.com.

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Here’s your first look at Kratos in Amazon’s God of War show

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Here’s your first look at Kratos in Amazon’s God of War show

Amazon has slowly been teasing out casting details for its live-action adaptation of God of War, and now we have our first look at the show. It’s a single image but a notable one showing protagonist Kratos and his son Atreus. The characters are played by Ryan Hurst and Callum Vinson, respectively, and they look relatively close to their video game counterparts.

There aren’t a lot of other details about the show just yet, but this is Amazon’s official description:

The God of War series storyline follows father and son Kratos and Atreus as they embark on a journey to spread the ashes of their wife and mother, Faye. Through their adventures, Kratos tries to teach his son to be a better god, while Atreus tries to teach his father how to be a better human.

That sounds a lot like the recent soft reboot of the franchise, which started with 2018’s God of War and continued through Ragnarök in 2022. For the Amazon series, Ronald D. Moore, best-known for his work on For All Mankind and Battlestar Galactica, will serve as showrunner. The rest of the cast includes: Mandy Patinkin (Odin), Ed Skrein (Baldur), Max Parker (Heimdall), Ólafur Darri Ólafsson (Thor), Teresa Palmer (Sif), Alastair Duncan (Mimir), Jeff Gulka (Sindri), and Danny Woodburn (Brok).

While production is underway on the God of War series, there’s no word on when it might start streaming.

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300,000 Chrome users hit by fake AI extensions

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300,000 Chrome users hit by fake AI extensions

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Your web browser may feel like a safe place, especially when you install helpful tools that promise to make your life easier. But security researchers have uncovered a dangerous campaign in which more than 300,000 people installed Chrome extensions pretending to be artificial intelligence (AI) assistants. Instead of helping, these fake tools secretly collect sensitive information like your emails, passwords and browsing activity.

They used familiar names like ChatGPT, Gemini and AI Assistant. If you use Chrome and have installed any AI-related extension, your personal information may already be exposed. Even worse, some of these malicious extensions are still available today, putting more people at risk without their knowing.

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More than 300,000 Chrome users installed fake AI extensions that secretly harvested sensitive data. (Kurt “CyberGuy” Knutsson)

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What you need to know about fake AI extensions

Security researchers at browser security company LayerX discovered a large campaign involving 30 malicious Chrome extensions disguised as AI-powered assistants (via BleepingComputer). Together, these extensions were installed more than 300,000 times by unsuspecting users.

Some of the most popular extensions included names like AI Sidebar with 70,000 users, AI Assistant with 60,000 users, ChatGPT Translate with 30,000 users, and Google Gemini with 10,000 users. Another extension called Gemini AI Sidebar had 80,000 users before it was removed.

These extensions were distributed through the official Chrome Web Store, which made them appear legitimate and trustworthy. Even more concerning, researchers found that many of these extensions were connected to the same malicious server, showing they were part of a coordinated effort.

While some extensions have since been removed, others remain available. This means new users could still unknowingly install them and expose their personal data. Here’s the list of the affected extensions:

  • AI Assistant
  • Llama
  • Gemini AI Sidebar
  • AI Sidebar
  • ChatGPT Sidebar
  • Grok
  • Asking ChatGPT
  • ChatGBT
  • Chat Bot GPT
  • Grok Chatbot
  • Chat With Gemini
  • XAI
  • Google Gemini
  • Ask Gemini
  • AI Letter Generator
  • AI Message Generator
  • AI Translator
  • AI For Translation
  • AI Cover Letter Generator
  • AI Image Generator ChatGPT
  • Ai Wallpaper Generator
  • Ai Picture Generator
  • DeepSeek Download
  • AI Email Writer
  • Email Generator AI
  • DeepSeek Chat
  • ChatGPT Picture Generator
  • ChatGPT Translate
  • AI GPT
  • ChatGPT Translation
  • ChatGPT for Gmail

FAKE AI CHAT RESULTS ARE SPREADING DANGEROUS MAC MALWARE

These malicious tools were listed in the official Chrome Web Store, making them appear legitimate and trustworthy. (LayerX)

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How the fake AI Chrome extension attack works

These fake extensions pretend to offer helpful AI features, such as translating text, summarizing emails, or acting as an AI assistant. But behind the scenes, they quietly monitor what you are doing online.

Once installed, the extension gains permission to view and interact with the websites you visit. This allows it to read the contents of web pages, including login screens where you enter your username and password.

In some cases, the extensions specifically targeted Gmail. They could read your email messages directly from your browser, including emails you received and even drafts you were still writing. This means attackers could access private conversations, financial information and sensitive personal details.

The extensions then sent this information to servers controlled by the attackers. Because they loaded content remotely, the attackers could change their behavior at any time without needing to update the extension.

Some versions could also activate voice features through your browser. This could potentially capture spoken conversations near your device and send transcripts back to the attackers.

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If you installed one of these extensions, attackers may already have access to extremely sensitive information. This includes your email content, login credentials, browsing habits and possibly even voice recordings.

We reached out to Google for comment, and a spokesperson told CyberGuy that the company “can confirm that the extensions from this report have all been removed from the Google Web Store.”

BROWSER EXTENSION MALWARE INFECTED 8.8M USERS IN DARKSPECTRE ATTACK

Once installed, the extensions could read emails, capture passwords, monitor browsing activity and send the data to attacker-controlled servers. (Bildquelle/ullstein bild via Getty Images)

7 ways you can protect yourself from malicious Chrome extensions

If you have ever installed an AI-related Chrome extension, taking a few simple precautions now can help protect your accounts and prevent further damage.

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1) Remove any suspicious or unused browser extensions

On a Windows PC or Mac, open Chrome and type chrome://extensions into the address bar. Review every extension listed. If you see anything unfamiliar, especially AI assistants you don’t remember installing, click “Remove” immediately. Malicious extensions depend on going unnoticed. Removing them stops further data collection and cuts off the attacker’s access to your information.

2) Change your passwords

If you installed any suspicious extension, assume your passwords may be compromised. Start by changing your email password first, since email controls access to most other accounts. Then update passwords for banking, shopping and social media accounts. This prevents attackers from using stolen credentials to break into your accounts.

3) Use a password manager to create and protect strong passwords

A password manager generates unique, complex passwords for each account and stores them securely. This prevents attackers from accessing multiple accounts if one password is stolen. Password managers also alert you if your login credentials appear in known data breaches, helping you respond quickly and protect your identity. Check out the best expert-reviewed password managers of 2026 at Cyberguy.com.

4) Install strong antivirus software and keep it active

Good antivirus software can detect malicious browser extensions, spyware, and other hidden threats. It scans your system for suspicious activity and blocks harmful programs before they can steal your information. This adds an important layer of protection that works continuously in the background to keep your device safe. Get my picks for the best 2026 antivirus protection winners for your Windows, Mac, Android & iOS devices at Cyberguy.com.

5) Use an identity theft protection service

Identity theft protection services monitor your personal data, including email addresses, financial accounts, and Social Security numbers, for signs of misuse. If criminals try to open accounts or commit fraud using your information, you receive alerts quickly. Early detection allows you to act fast and limit financial and personal damage. See my tips and best picks on how to protect yourself from identity theft at Cyberguy.com.

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6) Keep your browser and computer fully updated

Software updates fix security vulnerabilities that attackers exploit. Enable automatic updates for Chrome and your operating system so you always have the latest protections. These updates strengthen your defenses against malicious extensions and prevent attackers from taking advantage of known weaknesses.

7) Use a personal data removal service

Personal data removal services scan data broker websites that collect and sell your personal information. They help remove your data from these sites, reducing what attackers can find and use against you. Less exposed information means fewer opportunities for criminals to target you with scams, identity theft or phishing attacks.

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.

Kurt’s key takeaway

Even tools designed to make your life easier can become tools for cybercriminals. Malicious extensions often hide behind trusted names and convincing features, making them difficult to spot. You can significantly reduce your risk by reviewing your browser extensions regularly, removing anything suspicious and using protective tools like password managers and strong antivirus software.

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Have you checked your browser extensions recently? Let us know your thoughts by writing to us at Cyberguy.com.

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Copyright 2026 CyberGuy.com. All rights reserved.

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Anthropic refuses Pentagon’s new terms, standing firm on lethal autonomous weapons and mass surveillance

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Anthropic refuses Pentagon’s new terms, standing firm on lethal autonomous weapons and mass surveillance

Less than 24 hours before the deadline in an ultimatum issued by the Pentagon, Anthropic has refused the Department of Defense’s demands for unrestricted access to its AI.

It’s the culmination of a dramatic exchange of public statements, social media posts, and behind-the-scenes negotiations, coming down to Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth’s desire to renegotiate all AI labs’ current contracts with the military. But Anthropic, so far, has refused to back down from its two current red lines: no mass surveillance of Americans, and no lethal autonomous weapons (or weapons with license to kill targets with no human oversight whatsoever). OpenAI and xAI had reportedly already agreed to the new terms, while Anthropic’s refusal had led to CEO Dario Amodei being summoned to the White House this week for a meeting with Hegseth himself, in which the Secretary reportedly issued an ultimatum to the CEO to back down by the end of business day on Friday or else.

In a statement late Thursday, Amodei wrote, “I believe deeply in the existential importance of using AI to defend the United States and other democracies, and to defeat our autocratic adversaries. Anthropic has therefore worked proactively to deploy our models to the Department of War and the intelligence community.”

He added that the company has “never raised objections to particular military operations nor attempted to limit use of our technology in an ad hoc manner” but that in a “narrow set of cases, we believe AI can undermine, rather than defend, democratic values” — going on to specifically mention mass domestic surveillance and fully autonomous weapons. (Amodei mentioned that “partial autonomous weapons … are vital to the defense of democracy” and that fully autonomous weapons may eventually “prove critical for our national defense,” but that “today, frontier AI systems are simply not reliable enough to power fully autonomous weapons.” He did not rule out Anthropic acquiescing to the military’s use of fully autonomous weapons in the future but mentioned that they were not ready now.)

The Pentagon had already reportedly asked major defense contractors to assess their dependence on Anthropic’s Claude, which could be seen as the first step to designating the company a “supply chain risk” – a public threat that the Pentagon had made recently (and a classification usually reserved for threats to national security). The Pentagon was also reportedly considering invoking the Defense Production Act to make Anthropic comply.

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Amodei wrote in his statement that the Pentagon’s “threats do not change our position: we cannot in good conscience accede to their request.” He also wrote that “should the Department choose to offboard Anthropic, we will work to enable a smooth transition to another provider, avoiding any disruption to ongoing military planning, operations, or other critical missions. Our models will be available on the expansive terms we have proposed for as long as required.”

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