Tech
‘Dual-channel’ attacks are the new face of BEC in 2026 | Computer Weekly
So-called ‘dual-channel’ attacks using multiple methods of communication either simultaneously or in sequence are becoming more prevalent as digital fraudsters seek out new ways to defeat cyber protections against business email compromise (BEC) scams, according to new data from security services supplier LevelBlue.
BEC attacks – which spoof trusted entities, often c-suite executives, then use their identities to convince victims to transfer money into the attackers’ pockets – have long been a bugbear for enterprise defenders.
“[BEC] continues to be one of the costliest cyber attacks as reported by the FBI’s IC3, with over $2.7bn (£2bn) in adjusted losses in 2024 alone,” wrote LevelBlue researcher Katrina Udquin.
“BEC attacks are not slowing down, and fraudsters continue to evolve their scamming techniques and arsenal,” she said.
According to LevelBlue, last year its systems observed a significant increase in BEC attacks in which the initial lure was a request for contact, seeking to establish the potential victim’s mobile number or personal email address. A total of 43% of lures that it saw took this form, compared to 31% which took the form of a more traditional request for a payroll transfer, and 10% which asked for invoice payments or wire transfers.
Such request for contact lures are very often a precursor to a dual-channel attack seeking to move the conversation to an alternative platform.
LevelBlue’s systems tallied over 5,000 unique dual-channel attacks in 2025, and found that in 66% of them, the cyber fraudsters tried to move the conversation to traditional SMS messaging, in 32% of cases to messaging applications such as WhatsApp, and in 2% of cases to personal email addresses.
The rationale behind this tactic is a relatively simple one – external mobile networks, messaging applications and personal email addresses will in almost all circumstances fall well beyond the purview of any enterprise IT security department.
Done successfully, a dual-channel attack renders expensive email protection services basically useless, meaning all security teams can do is hope that the social engineering modules of their cyber training courses have been effective.
Related to this, LevelBlue said it also observed an increase in callback phishing, in which the criminals encourage their mark to reach out first by contacting a specified malicious phone number. This tactic more than doubled in popularity during 2025. Callback phishing is effective because it relies heavily on authority bias and a sense of urgency, exploiting people’s tendency to take messages or instructions from people in positions of authority seriously.
Emerging trends
According to LevelBlue’s data – gleaned largely from its proprietary MailMarshal defence service – 2025 saw a number of other notable trends developing in the BEC sphere.
Among these were the emergence of longer-form BEC emails. While BEC spam has traditionally been rather concise, more longer, well-crafted messages are now increasingly being seen, likely a result of cyber fraudsters trying to make their emails more elaborate and more authentic. Often, said LevelBlue’s researchers, longer emails appear to be being generated with the ‘help’ of generative artificial intelligence (GenAI) large language models (LLMs).
The past 12 months also saw a spike in attacks using multiple-personas and crafted email threads, where the victim appears to be copied in on an ongoing email chain. This tactic has been well-used for the past four or five years by nation-state threat actors targeting individuals of interest, such as academics, activists, diplomats, journalists or politicians, but is now spreading among financially-motivated groups, too.
In a criminal context multiple-persona impersonation and email threads seem to be being used predominantly in invoice payment fraud, with the spoofed identities often including the victim’s third-party suppliers.
Preventing BEC: Back to basics
Although cyber criminal tactics around BEC are clearly evolving, defenders can take solace from the fact that the best ways to protect against it are tried and tested.
Naturally, it remains an absolute imperative that staff across the organisation are educated on how to identify potential BEC spam email indicators.
Beyond this, security teams should ensure that they work with compliance and financial colleagues to ensure the organisation performs rigorous identification and verification checks when making external payments.
Finally, limiting access controls to organisational systems, records and documentations, and protecting these with multifactor authentication (MFA) as standard, can inhibit the risk of data theft.
Tech
Mom’s Microwaved Coffee Won’t Stand a Chance With This Ember Smart Mug Deal
The Ember Smart Mug 2 is niche, but it has a loyal following. Even though we think there are better mug warmers on the market, Ember is like Apple AirPods or Kleenex. People want what they want. Right now, for Mother’s Day, the Ember Smart Mug 2 is on sale for just under $100, a 30 percent discount and a match of the very best price we’ve tracked. You can save at Amazon, Best Buy, and the manufacturer’s website.
This smart mug is probably overkill. It has a smartphone app that notifies you when your coffee reaches the ideal temperature, and its onboard light also provides a visual indicator that your brew is ready. It intelligently adjusts power usage to keep your drink warm when you’re nearby, and turns off when you’re not around. The self-heating mug is on sale in a few variations—10 or 14 ounces, in blue, white, black, and purple.
The mug offers up to 80 minutes of powered heating time, or you can pop it on the included charging coaster to keep the battery going all day. And you don’t need the smartphone app unless you want to precisely dictate your coffee temperature—the mug defaults to 135 degrees Fahrenheit without your specific input.
Our main gripe is that this proprietary warming system is not dishwasher safe. You need to hand-wash each component, and ensure you do so carefully, because the items are not cheap to replace. But if Mom has been putzing around the house drinking perpetually microwaved coffee, perhaps an upgrade is in order. We have additional recommendations in our guide to the Best Coffee Warmers. You may also want to check our related stories on the Best Espresso Machines, Best Coffee Machines, and Best Pod Coffee Makers.
Tech
AI-Designed Drugs by a DeepMind Spinoff Are Headed to Human Trials
Google DeepMind’s AlphaFold has already revolutionized scientists’ understanding of proteins. Now, the ability of the platform to design safe and effective drugs is about to be put to the test.
Isomorphic Labs, the UK-based biotech spinoff of Google DeepMind, will soon begin human trials of drugs designed by its Nobel Prize–winning AI technology. “We’re gearing up to go into the clinic,” Isomorphic Labs president Max Jaderberg said on April 16 at WIRED Health in London. “It’s going to be a very exciting moment as we go into clinical trials and start seeing the efficacy of these molecules.”
Jaderberg did not elaborate on the timeline, but it’s later than the company had planned to initiate human studies. Last year, CEO Demis Hassabis said it would have AI-designed drugs in clinical trials by the end of 2025.
Isomorphic Labs was founded in 2021 as a spinoff from Alphabet’s AI research subsidiary, Google DeepMind. The company uses DeepMind’s AlphaFold, a groundbreaking AI platform that predicts protein structures, for drug discovery.
Built from 20 different amino acids, proteins are essential for all living organisms. Long strings of amino acids link together and fold up to make a protein’s three-dimensional structure, which dictates the protein’s function. Researchers had tried to predict protein structures since the 1970s, but this was a painstaking process given the astronomically high number of possible shapes a protein chain can take.
That changed in 2020, when DeepMind’s Hassabis and John Jumper presented stunning results from AlphaFold 2, which uses deep-learning techniques. A year later, the company released an open-source version of AlphaFold available to anyone.
In 2024, DeepMind and Isomorphic Labs released AlphaFold 3, which advanced scientists’ understanding of proteins even further. It moved beyond modeling proteins in isolation to predicting other important molecules, such as DNA and RNA, and their interactions with proteins.
“This is exactly what you need for drug discovery: You need to see how a small molecule is going to bind to a drug, how strongly, and also what else it might bind to,” Hassabis told WIRED at the time.
Since its release, the AlphaFold platform has been able to predict the structure of virtually all the 200 million proteins known to researchers and has been used by more than 2 million people from 190 countries. The breakthrough earned Hassabis and Jumper the Nobel Prize for chemistry in 2024, with the Nobel committee noting that AlphaFold has enabled a number of scientific applications, including a better understanding of antibiotic resistance and the creation of images of enzymes that can decompose plastic.
Earlier this year, Isomorphic Labs announced an even more powerful tool, what it calls IsoDDE, its proprietary drug-design engine. In a technical paper, the company touts that the platform more than doubles the accuracy of AlphaFold 3.
The startup has formed partnerships with Eli Lilly and Novartis to work together on AI drug discovery and is also advancing its own “broad and exciting pipeline of new medicines” in oncology and immunology, Jaderberg said.
“The exciting thing about the molecules that we’re designing is because we have so much more of an understanding about how these molecules work, we’ve engineered them to be very, very potent,” Jaderberg told the audience at WIRED Health. “You can take them at a much lower dose, and they’ll have lower side effects, off target effects.”
Last year, Isomorphic appointed a chief medical officer and announced it had raised $600 million in its first funding round to gear up for clinical trials. Meanwhile, the company has been building a clinical development team. Its mission is to “solve all disease.”
“It’s a crazy mission,” Jaderberg said. “But we really mean it. We say it with a straight face, because we believe this should be possible.”
Tech
London Marathon runners get AI to go the extra mile | Computer Weekly
With huge crowds set to descend on London for the city’s iconic marathon this weekend, IT services provider Tata Consultancy Services (TCS), in partnership with Neurun, has launched a map-based tool powered by artificial intelligence (AI) to help participants and spectators navigate the event.
TCS RunConcierge is said to act as a “digital brain” for the London Marathon, bringing together official guidance, route support and course information in real time – a useful tool for this mass participation event, which saw more than 56,000 runners cross the finish line in 2025 and hundreds of thousands of spectators lining the 26.2-mile route.
Powered by Google Gemini, the platform is designed to deliver instant and reliable guidance for users, whether that be runners seeking information about start line logistics or the location of drinks stops – which will be very much needed with wall-to-wall sunshine forecast on the day – or supporters wishing to locate the best spot from which to cheer on participants or travel as quickly as possible between viewing points.
Users can see their current location on the map, ask for directions to key event destinations and access pre-loaded routes with direct links to Google Maps navigation. The tool also suggests personalised follow-up questions and features voice activation to enable hands-free use on the move. And with 60 languages supported, visitors from all over the world will be able to benefit from the event guidance.
For runners specifically, the immersive 3D map includes an elevation tracker, which could help them plan their strategy.
The partnership between TCS and Neurun is said to be built on a foundation of continuous innovation. New back-end capabilities include a self-serve admin portal that allows event organisers to manage RunConcierge independently, as well as a unique internal AI agent that tests the platform to help maintain content quality and identify improvements
Vinay Singhvi, head of UK and Ireland at Tata Consultancy Services, described the London Marathon as a monumental event, for which its goal is to use technology to make the experience as seamless and enjoyable as possible.
“Our partnership with Neurun allows us to innovate at pace, and the enhanced TCS RunConcierge is a prime example of how we are using AI to solve complex logistical challenges, providing runners and spectators with a trusted companion for the moments that matter most,” he said.
Neurun founder Cade Netscher said its partnership with TCS had been instrumental in developing the RunConcierge tool for the world’s most prestigious marathons, with previous successful deployments at the Sydney and New York City events.
“For London, we’ve integrated the latest AI advancements to create our most powerful and user-friendly version yet. We are excited to see how it helps thousands of people enjoy a more connected and stress-free marathon weekend,” he said.
Separately, in a demonstration of digital healthcare technology in action, TCS has created a digital twin of a para-athlete’s heart, which uses sensors and AI to monitor her heart during training sessions.
The para-athlete, Milly Pickles, is aiming to complete the London Marathon in under four-and-a-half hours next year, and is harnessing digital healthtech to reach her goal.
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