Cybersecurity News Breakdown: the biggest threats this week aren’t “mystery hacks”—they’re predictable failures: stolen credentials, fast-moving phishing,...
Sam Marin
I'm Sam — a writer who can't stop taking things apart. Wired Lens started as a notebook full of half-finished gadget reviews and screenshots of suspicious emails, and somewhere along the way it turned into the site you're reading now. I cover the tech I actually use: the laptop on my desk, the router that mysteriously reboots at 3 a.m., the password manager I keep recommending to my parents. I read threat reports the way other people read novels, and I'd rather tell you a product is mediocre than pretend it's revolutionary. If something here saves you money, time, or a security headache, that's the whole point.
Modern mobile attacks rarely start with brute-force. They start with social engineering, malicious apps, shady web pages,...
Buying a budget laptop in 2026 feels simple—until you notice the same “Core i5” label paired with...
If you’ve ever tapped your phone to share a contact, tried to track a lost key with...
Here’s the surprise: for most gamers and editors, the biggest “performance boost” isn’t your GPU—it’s the drive...
Here’s the part most people don’t realize: data breaches rarely “start with data”. They start with an...
First thing: a data breach doesn’t just steal credentials—it often turns your devices into the easiest entry...
Real-world USB‑C speed usually isn’t limited by USB‑C. It’s limited by a mismatch between power delivery (PD),...
USB-C explained: the same-looking connector can deliver everything from slow 5W charging to 100W+ fast charging and...
