How Social Engineering Can Hack You

View profile for Richard Stephen

Cybersecurity Awareness Advocate | Storyteller | SEO | Copywriter & Content Writer | Simplifying Tech, Building Trust.

The Human Weak Link Hackers don’t always “hack.” Sometimes, they just ask nicely. A famous hacker once proved this by calling up a company employee, pretending to be from IT. He said:  “Hi, we’re doing some updates. Can I get your password real quick so we don’t lock you out?” Guess what? The employee handed it over. No code, no brute force, no Hollywood-style hacking. Just human trust. This is called social engineering — hacking people, not machines. It works because we want to be helpful. We trust authority. We don’t want to get in trouble. In cybersecurity, the human is often the weakest link. You can spend millions on firewalls, monitoring tools, and AI defense systems, but one careless click, one shared password, or one trusting phone call can undo it all.    Technology can defend us, but awareness protects us. The next time someone asks for sensitive info — pause, verify, and trust your gut. Because the best security patch is still common sense. #CyberSecurityAwareness #Threatdetection #cyberdefense

Richard Stephen By cultivating a culture of scepticism and verifying requests, individuals can significantly strengthen an organisation's security posture against social engineering threats.

Timothy Albritton, Sr

Senior Management Analyst at U.S. AIR FORCE

1mo

Thanks for sharing, Richard…❤️🔥

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