Big Tech’s “unbreakable” security shield just cracked wide open — and 183 million Americans are now paying the price.
This isn’t just another tech hiccup. It’s one of the largest privacy disasters in recent history — a complete breakdown of corporate accountability that left ordinary users defenseless while hackers cleaned house.
Now, Google is in full-blown damage control mode after a massive security failure revealed how easily criminals breached millions of accounts right under their nose.
Cybersecurity expert Troy Hunt sent shockwaves through the industry when he added 183 million stolen email passwords to his “Have I Been Pwned” database — data ripped from American users and traded across dark web forums.
The source of the theft wasn’t some top-secret government hacker. It came from cheap, off-the-shelf malware called infostealers that can be purchased online for as little as $60. These nasty programs quietly drain passwords and private information from infected devices — and Google’s so-called “world-class” defenses couldn’t stop them.
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