ICE Details a New Minnesota-Based Detention Network That Spans 5 States
If a message popped up in your feed tomorrow promising a cash refund, a surprise giveaway, or a limited-time crypto opportunity, would you pause long enough to question it?
That split second matters more than ever.
Most modern scams don’t rely on panic or obvious red flags. They rely on familiarity. On things that feel normal. On moments that seem too small to question.
And those moments are exactly what scammers exploit.
There was a time when spotting a scam was relatively straightforward. The emails were badly written. The websites looked rushed. The warnings were obvious.
Scammers don’t just rely on obvious spam or panic-driven messages. Instead, many now use:
McAfee’s Celebrity Deepfake Deception research shows how common and convincing these scams have become: 72% of Americans say they’ve seen a fake or AI-generated celebrity endorsement, and 39% say they’ve clicked on one that turned out to be fraudulent. When scam content shows up in the same feeds, apps, and formats people use every day, it feels normal.
That’s the danger zone. It’s also why McAfee chose to use a familiar, culturally recognizable moment to talk about a much bigger issue.
Whether you’ve been saying mack-uh-fee or mick-affy, the long-running name mix-up is harmless in everyday conversation.
Online, though, small moments of confusion can have outsized consequences.
Scammers rely on quick assumptions: that a familiar name means legitimacy, that a recognizable face means trust, that a message arriving in the right place must be real. They move fast, hoping people act before stopping to verify
Pat McAfee knows firsthand how scammers exploit familiarity and trust.
In recent months, fake social media giveaways promising cash and prizes have circulated using Pat’s likeness, and even a fraudulent “American Heart Association fundraiser” made the rounds, falsely claiming he was collecting donations.
Pat wants his fans to know: if you ever see a giveaway, fundraiser, or message claiming to be from him, double-check it on his official channels first. If it feels off, it probably is.
Unfortunately, these scams work because people trust Pat. Scammers exploit that trust to lower people’s guard and make fraudulent requests feel legitimate.
It’s the same tactic used across countless impersonation scams today: borrow the authority of a familiar face, add a sense of urgency, and move fast before anyone stops to verify, “is this legit?” We’ve seen it happen with Taylor Swift, Tom Hanks, Al Roker, Brad Pitt, and numerous others.
Remember, no legitimate giveaway will ask for payment, banking details, login credentials, or account access. And no nonprofit fundraiser tied to a celebrity should ever come from a personal message or unfamiliar social account.
In the video below, Pat McAfee playfully demonstrates how easily familiar moments online can turn into risk, and why digital safety today can’t rely on perfect judgment alone.
You don’t have to stop using your favorite platforms. But you do have to change how you verify online threats.
If a video or message feels real but the request feels extreme, that’s a red flag.
McAfee offers more than traditional antivirus, combining multiple layers of digital protection in one app
If a scam looks obvious, most people won’t fall for it.
But modern scams don’t look obvious. They look familiar. They use your favorite faces. They look normal. They look safe. And that’s where people get hurt.
Staying safe now means slowing down, verifying independently, and having protection work quietly in the background while you stay focused on what you actually came online to do.
McAfee’s built-in Scam Detector, included in all core plans, automatically detects scams across text, email, and video, blocks dangerous sites, and identifies deepfakes, stopping harm before it happens.
And because today’s risks aren’t just about what you click, a VPN and Personal Data Cleanup add additional layers of defense by helping protect your connection and limit how much personal information is available to be exploited in the first place.
Ready to get Pat’s Picks? Learn more here.
For clarity, and because these questions come up often, here’s the straightforward explanation:
| Q: Is Pat McAfee the founder of McAfee antivirus? A: No. Pat McAfee is not associated with the founding or leadership of McAfee. McAfee was founded by John McAfee and operates independently. |
| Q: Are Pat McAfee and McAfee the same company? A: No. Pat McAfee is a sports media personality. McAfee is a cybersecurity company. They are separate entities. |
| Q: Why does McAfee work with Pat McAfee? A: McAfee partnered with Pat McAfee to raise awareness about online scams, impersonation fraud, and digital safety using culturally relevant examples. |
The post McAfee and Pat McAfee Turn a Name Mix-Up Into a Push for Online Safety appeared first on McAfee Blog.
Google has officially discontinued its Dark Web Report, the tool that alerted users when their personal information appeared in dark web breach databases. New scans stop on January 15, 2026, and on February 16, 2026, Google will permanently delete all data associated with the feature.
This does not mean Google.com or Google Accounts are going away. It means Google is no longer scanning the dark web for leaked data tied to your account, and it is no longer storing or updating any breach information that was collected for the report.
For people who relied on Google’s alerts, this change creates a real gap. After January 16, you will no longer get new notifications if your information shows up in breach databases. That is why it is worth taking a few minutes now to lock down the basics.
According to reporting from TechCrunch, Google said it ended the service after concluding that it did not give users enough clarity about what to do once their data was found.
That decision highlights a much larger shift in online security: Finding leaked data is no longer enough. Protecting identity is now the real challenge.
The Dark Web Report was a Google Account feature that searched known data breach dumps and dark web marketplaces for personal information tied to a user, such as email addresses, phone numbers, and other identifiers.
If Google found a match, it sent an alert.
What it did not do was show which accounts were at risk, whether financial or government ID data was involved, or how to prevent fraud from happening next. That gap is why some users said the tool fell short.
The internet has three layers:
The dark web is where data from breaches is commonly sold, traded, and packaged for scams. When a company is hacked, stolen files often end up in dark web databases that include email addresses, passwords, Social Security numbers, bank details, and full identity profiles.
Scammers use this data to commit account takeovers, financial fraud, tax fraud, and identity theft.
Even without passwords, this personal information can be enough for scammers to target you with convincing phishing and social engineering scams.
Looking up an email address is no longer enough. Modern identity theft relies on things like Social Security numbers, government IDs, bank and credit card numbers, tax records, insurance data, usernames, and phone numbers.
To understand whether any of that is exposed, people need to monitor the dark web for identity-level data, not just logins.
Here is what that looks like in practice:
Tools like McAfee’s Identity Monitoring are designed to look for those types of data so you can act before fraud happens.
Been meaning to bolster your security? Here are three quick ways you can enhance your identity protection and reduce real-world damage in a breach:
Estimated time: 10 minutes
This is a powerful free protection option that many forget about. A credit freeze blocks anyone from opening new loans, credit cards, or accounts in your name, even if they have your Social Security number and full identity profile.
You can do this for free with any of the major credit bureaus. If you do it with one, the others are notified.
Why this matters: Most identity theft today is not account hacking. It is criminals opening accounts in your name. A credit freeze stops that cold.
Estimated time: 10 minutes
Go into your main bank and credit card apps and turn on:
You’ll find these somewhere under Settings>Alerts.
Why this matters: Identity thieves often test stolen data with small charges or login attempts before stealing larger amounts. These alerts are how you catch it early.
Estimated time: 10 minutes
This is one of the most overlooked vulnerabilities.
Go into:
Check and update:
Remove anything you do not recognize.
Why this matters: Even if you change your password, attackers can still take over accounts through recovery systems if those are compromised. This closes that back door.
| Is Google deleting my Google Account data? No. Google is only deleting the data it collected specifically for the Dark Web Report feature. Your Gmail, Drive, Photos, and other Google Account data are not affected. |
| Is Google still protecting my account from hackers? Yes. Google continues to offer security features like two-factor authentication, login alerts, and account recovery tools. What it removed is the dark web scanning and alert system tied to breach data. |
| Does the dark web report website still exist? No. After February 16, 2026, Google no longer operates or updates the Dark Web Report feature. There is no active scanning, no dashboard, and no stored breach data tied to it. |
| Does this mean dark web monitoring is useless? No. It means email-only monitoring is not enough. Criminals use far more than emails to commit fraud, which is why identity-level monitoring is now more important. |
| What kind of information is most dangerous if it appears on the dark web? Social Security numbers, government IDs, bank and credit card numbers, tax records, insurance IDs, usernames, and phone numbers are the data types most commonly used for identity theft and financial fraud. |
| How can I check if my information is exposed right now? You can use an identity monitoring service like McAfee that scans dark web sources for sensitive personal data, not just email addresses. That is how people can see whether their identity is being traded or abused today. |
The post Google Ends Dark Web Report. What That Means and How to Stay Safe appeared first on McAfee Blog.