VIDEO – I know who you are after 1 click online hi-jacking your Facebook Like & Twitter Follow Buttons
A website places an invisible object over something a visitor is likely to click on, such as a link or an image. When the visitor clicks on what they visually see, they are actually being tricked into clicking on a hidden object. To demonstrate the power of Clickjacking, the first demonstration of the attack technique
Continue Reading »
![Facebook WARNING: Avoid the “[HOW AWFUL] At 15-years, she did THIS publicly in high school while drunk!!!” SCAM Facebook WARNING: Avoid the “[HOW AWFUL] At 15-years, she did THIS publicly in high school while drunk!!!” SCAM](http://thepctool.com/wp-content/uploads/Snap21-150x150.jpg)

![Validate my RSS feed [Valid RSS]](http://thepctool.com/wp-content/uploads/valid-rss-rogers.png)