The most dangerous hacks are the ones you you never notice.
We all think: My computer seems fine as it is not slow or crashing. Definitely not hacked.
Sound familiar, isn't it? We all have learnt from movies to expect flashing screens, garbled text, and obvious system failure when a device is compromised. But in reality, the most successful hackers are like professional spies. The last thing they want is for you to know they are there.

Welcome to Mythbuster Monday, where we separate digital fact from fiction. Today, we are exposing one of them. Let's uncover it.
A hacked device would show obvious signs like extreme slowness, crashing or colored pop-ups.
Modern cyber attacks are designed to be invisible. The more valuable you are to a hacker, the less likely you are to notice their presence. Here is why:
They want to stay hidden
- Hackers avoid detection
- You computers not enough to alarm you
- They avoid triggering antivirus software
You are more useful when compromised
- Your email account is monitored for sensitive information
- Your social media can be used to scam your friends
- Your computer can be part of a botnet attacking other targets
- All of this works better if you do not know it is happening
Subtle signs your device might be compromised
- Battery drains faster than usual
- Background processes consume extra power
- Your phone or laptop might feel warmer
- Unexplained data usage spikes
- Malware might be transmitting your data to external servers
- Check your data usage for unexpected increase
- Small Performance Changes
- Programs taking slightly longer to open
- Web pages loading a bit slower than usual
- Mouse cursor stuttering occasionally
- Strange Account Behaviors
- Friends receiving messages you did not send
- Passwords reset emails you did not send
- Password reset emails you did not request
- Social media posts you don't remember making
- Email Forwarding Rules
- Hackers create rules to forward your emails to themselves
- You never see the emails they are stealing
- They monitor your accounts for login credentials and sensitive information
- Browser Session Hijacking
- They steal your logged in session cookies
- Can access your accounts without your password
- You remain logged in and notice nothing unusual
- Cryptojacking
- Your device's resources are used to mine cryptocurrency
- Might cause slight slowdowns you'd attribute to "needing an upgrade"
- Hacker earn money quietly in the background
How to actually protect yourself
- Monitor Account Activity
- Regularly check login locations and active sessions
- Review account security settings monthly
- Use Security Software
- Run regular malware scans
- Keep your antivirus and operating system updated
- Check for strange behavior
- Monitor data usage and battery life patterns
- Look for unknown processes in your task manager
- Practice Good Digital Hygiene
- Use unique passwords for every account
- Enable two-factor authentication everywhere
- Be cautions about what you download
Stay Smart, Stay Safe!!