The Black Swordsman
The Cyber Yoda is the daily desk: clear, plain-spoken coverage of the cybersecurity news, scams, AI developments, and policy that affect everyday readers and businesses, with the occasional stay-safe guide.
Ministry of Cyber Affairs writers publish under pseudonyms. Our editorial model.
Investment Scams Are Now the World's Costliest Cyber Fraud
Across the US, India and Singapore, one scam type tops every loss chart in 2025: investment fraud - increasingly powered by AI-generated personas and fake trading apps.
UIDAI Migrates Aadhaar Services to New Mobile Application Platform
The UIDAI is phasing out the legacy mAadhaar application as it transitions users to a new, updated mobile app infrastructure for Aadhaar-related services.
How to Report Cybercrime in Texas (and Get Your Money Back)
A practical guide for Texas victims of online fraud and scams: freeze the payment at your bank, file with the FBI's IC3 and the FTC, add a Texas Attorney General consumer complaint and a local police report, and use the federal rules (EFTA/Reg E and FCBA) that decide whether your money comes back.
How to Report Cybercrime in Pennsylvania (and Get Your Money Back)
A step-by-step guide for Pennsylvania residents who have lost money to online fraud: where to report (federal IC3 and FTC plus the Pennsylvania Attorney General's Bureau of Consumer Protection and state or local police), how recovery actually works, and what you need to act fast.
How to Report Cybercrime in Ohio (and Get Your Money Back)
A practical, Ohio-specific guide to reporting online fraud and scams: file with the federal IC3 and FTC, lodge a consumer complaint with the Ohio Attorney General (800-282-0515), notify local police, and act fast with your bank to maximize your chance of recovery.
How to Report Cybercrime in North Carolina (and Get Your Money Back)
A step-by-step guide for North Carolina residents who have lost money to online fraud, scams, or identity theft. Covers the federal IC3 and FTC reports, the North Carolina Department of Justice consumer complaint, your local police and the State Bureau of Investigation, and the bank rules that decide whether you get your money back.
How to Report Cybercrime in New York (and Get Your Money Back)
If you have been scammed or hacked in New York, here is exactly where to report it and how to try to recover your money: federal IC3 and FTC complaints, the New York Attorney General's consumer fraud complaint, the NY Department of Financial Services, and your local police or NYPD. Includes the bank rules that decide whether you get refunded.
How to Report Cybercrime in New Jersey (and Get Your Money Back)
Report to the federal IC3 and FTC, and in New Jersey file a complaint with the Division of Consumer Affairs, report the cyber incident to the NJCCIC, and notify the State Police or local police. Then call your bank now, because speed decides whether the money can be recalled.
How to Report Cybercrime in Michigan (and Get Your Money Back)
A step-by-step guide for Michigan victims of online fraud and cybercrime: call your bank now, file with the FBI's IC3 and the FTC, and use Michigan's own channels (the Attorney General Consumer Protection complaint and your local police or Michigan State Police) to push for recovery.
How to Report Cybercrime in Illinois (and Get Your Money Back)
A step-by-step guide for Illinois residents on reporting online fraud and scams: federal IC3 and FTC reports, the Illinois Attorney General Consumer Fraud complaint, state and local police, and how money recovery actually works.
How to Report Cybercrime in Georgia (and Get Your Money Back)
If you were scammed or had money stolen online in Georgia, report to the federal IC3 and FTC, file a complaint with the Georgia Department of Law Consumer Protection Division, and notify local police or the GBI. Most importantly, call your bank right now. Here is the exact order to do it in and how recovery actually works.
How to Report Cybercrime in Florida (and Get Your Money Back)
A Florida-specific guide to reporting online fraud and scams: file federally with the FBI's IC3 and the FTC, then add the Florida layer through the state Attorney General and FDACS consumer complaints plus your local sheriff or police. Includes the steps to take, what to have ready, and how money recovery actually works.