Leo’s PC was acting up. His frame rates in Cyberpunk were dropping, his Wi-Fi kept cutting out, and a nagging notification told him his drivers were ancient. He didn’t want to pay for a premium subscription, so he went hunting in the corners of the internet where everything is "free."
"XYZ," Leo thought. "That must be the group that cracked it. Legends." He clicked download. The file was small—too small, maybe—but he didn't care. He was five minutes away from a smooth-running machine. The Extraction IObit.Driver.Booster.10.0.0.65 - XYZ.rar
Leo realized too late that "XYZ" wasn't a group of digital Robin Hoods. It was a signature for a Remote Access Trojan (RAT). By disabling his antivirus to install the "fix," he had personally handed the keys to his digital life to someone miles away. Leo’s PC was acting up
Leo rolled his eyes. "Of course it says that. Antivirus software hates cracks." He did what thousands of people do every day: he clicked and disabled his firewall "just for a second." The Ghost in the Machine "That must be the group that cracked it