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AEW Forbidden Door 2026 predictions, preview and more
Forbidden Door is one of the more unique events on the All Elite Wrestling (AEW) calendar.
The show brings in wrestlers from AEW, Consejo Mundial de Lucha Libre (CMLL), New Japan Pro-Wrestling (NJPW) and Stardom all on one card. To heighten the stakes even further, finals of the Owen Hart Foundation Men’s and Women’s Tournaments will also conclude.
The card for 2026’s iteration of Forbidden Door features five championship matches. The event begins at 7 p.m. ET with the Buy In and the main card begins at 8 p.m. ET at the SAP Center in San Jose, California.
Read below for previews and predictions of each match.
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Skye Blue and Stardom’s Maika will compete on the Buy-In portion of Forbidden Door with a spot in the TBS Championship Survival of the Fittest match on the line. The winner will advance for a shot at the TBS Championship, which was vacated by Willow Nightingale due to an injury. Blue has been aligned with Thekla, who has vowed to destroy Stardom and New Japan. Blue will give the Triangle of Madness’ first hit at Stardom.
Prediction: Skye Blue wins this one.
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Megan Bayne and Lena Kross, the Divine Dominion, have been on a tear since winning the AEW Women’s World Tag Team Championship. The duo has dispatched every challenger in their way. On Sunday, they will meet Thunder Rosa and CMLL’s Olympia. The Divine Dominion’s prowess cannot be overlooked here.
Prediction: Megan Bayne and Lena Kross retain.
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David Finlay and Clark Connors have targeted Adam Copeland and Christian Cage since Double or Nothing ended. Copeland and Cage couldn’t even have their moment for flash photography with AEW fans. They’ve had to look over their shoulders at almost every AEW TV appearance. But the veteran tag team duo have lived up their impressionable careers where it has mattered the most – in the ring.
Prediction: Cope and Cage keep the tag titles around their waists.
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A triple-threat tag team match puts the best of pro wrestling on display. The Young Bucks take on Místico and Máscara Dorada and Shingo Takagi and Titán. AEW, CMLL and NJPW will be on display in this match in what should be a fun one.
Prediction: Matt and Nick Jackson take home the victory here.
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Jon Moxley has held the AEW Continental Championship since Worlds End in December and has defended the title every step of the way. Bandido offers a unique challenge for Moxley, who likes to keep his opponents grounded for the most part. Bandido could pull off the upset here at Forbidden Door and take a title off a member of The Death Riders.
Prediction: Bandido wins AEW gold
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New Japan’s Shota Umino will return to an AEW ring to defend the IWGP Global Heavyweight Championship against Pac. He won the title off AEW’s Andrade in a three-way match at Dominion earlier this month. It is a major title defense as he goes up against the hard-hitting Pac. Should Pac and Moxley lose, The Death Riders will be without any titles in the faction.
Prediction: Umino retains the title
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Thekla’s war against New Japan and Stardom started almost immediately after Double or Nothing. She put three challengers away at the last pay-per-view and begged the Japanese pro wrestling promotions to send their best. They obliged. Starlight Kid is a former Stardom champion and while Thekla has the Triangle of Madness behind her, Starlight Kid has Neo Genesis in her corner. Thekla has proven to be one of the fiercest women’s wrestlers in the world and she will prove it again on Sunday night.
Prediction: Thekla retains in a hard-hitting match.
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It all comes down to this. The Owen Hart Cup women’s final between Mercedes Moné and Maya World with a shot at the AEW Women’s World Championship on the line at All In. Moné is the CEO and one of the best in the ring. She returned to AEW as a wild card entrant in the tournament and has been on a tear since then. World is an up-and-comer who is riding a wave of momentum going into the final. World has proven more than capable to knock down any opponent that stepped to her. It all culminates in Sunday’s match.
Prediction: Mercedes Moné wins and goes to All In.
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Sometimes, a match that is not in the main event can steal the show. Pro wrestling fans saw that at Double or Nothing between Konosuke Takeshita and Kazuchika Okada. Sunday may be no different when Kenny Omega and Zack Sabre Jr. step in between the ropes for their likely classic that they will put on. Omega and Sabre are two of the best in the world and what they will bring to the ring doesn’t necessarily need to be explained. Sit back and watch this one intently.
Prediction: Kenny Omega takes care of Zack Sabre Jr.
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Will Ospreay has vowed, with all his being, that he is going to main event All In at Wembley Stadium. He has kept his promise so far, but faces a familiar foe in Swerve Strickland in the finals of the Owen Hart Foundation Men’s Tournament. There’s a lot of emotion behind the final here and it will be expressed during the match. Ospreay and Strickland both want to be on top of AEW and have proven to be more than capable of taking on that challenge.
Prediction: Will Ospreay will see his dream realized and defeat Swerve Strickland.
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AEW world champion Maxwell Jacob Friedman is putting Mark Briscoe through the wringer as Briscoe tries to challenge for his title. MJF has a laundry list of reasons why Briscoe shouldn’t be able to make the challenge but he’s left off a few things – Briscoe’s grit and heart. Briscoe and his team will have to beat MJF and his team in a steel cage match for him to get that shot. Briscoe’s team includes Orange Cassidy, Roderick Strong, Kyle O’Reilly, Konosuke Takeshita and Darby Allin. MJF’s team includes Kevin Knight, Kyle Fletcher, Jake Doyle, Kazuchika Okada and Andrade El Idolo.
Prediction: Team Briscoe wins in a brutal match.
WATCH: Biden appears confused about where to exit stage after Democratic gala remarks
Former President Joe Biden appeared to briefly seek directions before exiting the stage after delivering remarks at a Democratic gala Saturday night, capping his speech with an awkward onstage moment.
After delivering a roughly 10-minute keynote speech at the Maryland Democratic Party's "Fight Back & Win Gala" near Baltimore, the 83-year-old paused onstage and looked toward the wings before pointing in two different directions, seemingly trying to determine where to exit. After receiving guidance, Biden turned and walked off the stage with his back to the audience.
Unlike several other speakers at the gala, who exited on the opposite side of the stage after their remarks, Biden left in a different direction.
The moment came after Biden delivered one of his sharpest public critiques of President Donald Trump since leaving office. During his remarks, Biden defended his own administration's record while accusing the Trump administration of corruption. He also took aim at what he described as Trump's "vanity projects," including renovations to the White House, changes at the Kennedy Center and the ongoing saga with the reflecting pool on the National Mall.
"Whoa, what a loser," Biden said.
After pausing several times to cough throughout his remarks, Biden concluded with a call for Democrats to "fight back," saying the country could overcome its challenges by acting together.
"Folks, I guarantee we can do this. And we will. We just remember who in the hell we are. We're the United States of America," Biden said. "There's nothing, nothing beyond our capacity if we act together. So let's get up and fight back, God darn it."
The latest onstage moment comes just days after another widely shared incident at the opening of the Obama Presidential Center in Chicago.
WATCH: BIDEN LEFT SEARCHING FOR FAMILY AFTER OBAMA PRESIDENTIAL CENTER CEREMONY
The star-studded ceremony brought together former Presidents Barack Obama, Bill Clinton and George W. Bush, along with former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, former Vice President Kamala Harris and other political leaders and entertainers. At the conclusion of the event, Biden remained onstage after others had exited before calling out, "Where's my granddaughter?"
Former First Lady Jill Biden then returned to the stage, took his hand and guided him off.
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Biden has largely stayed out of the public eye since withdrawing from the 2024 presidential race after facing intense pressure from fellow Democrats to end his reelection bid.
The former president has since made only occasional public appearances and recently disclosed that he is undergoing treatment for Stage 4 prostate cancer.
Jane Seymour admits one workout is completely off-limits at 75: 'I'm way too A-type’
Jane Seymour has one surprising fitness confession at 75.
Seymour relies on a routine that's kept her energized for decades — one that's built on movement, moderation and knowing her limits.
The "Harry Wild" star said she avoids yoga because she's "way too A-type," joking that she'd try to outdo everyone in class.
"Well, fitness, I try to do a combination of light weights, some walking, fast walking if I can, or up and down a hill. I do Pilates and Gyrotonics, or if I can't do any of that, I do the usual thing, the sort of sit-ups and some ballet exercises," she told Fox News Digital.
"Actually, I go back to my ballet roots. I do a full barre. I eat a Mediterranean diet, usually. I stay away from starch, but not completely, because I never want to think I'm on a diet. I drink very moderately. When I'm filming, not at all."
Seymour said the secret to staying active isn't pushing herself to do every trendy workout — it's knowing her own limits.
WATCH: JANE SEYMOUR SHARES THE WORKOUT ROUTINE BEHIND HER AGELESS LOOK
"I've had to actually tell myself that when I go into a group class, especially something like yoga, that I have to tell myself I am not going to win, because I'm way too A-type..."
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She continued, "I want to win... Which means that I can never have done yoga, and I will decide that I could turn myself into the pretzel like that person. No. No, I cannot. I'll end up in the hospital or something, so... My approach is to try everything, but do it the way that I know I can. So, I listen to my body."
That mindset has helped fuel Seymour's seemingly endless energy — something her longtime friend and former "Dr. Quinn, Medicine Woman" co-star Joe Lando knows all too well.
More than three decades after becoming one of television's most beloved couples, the pair have reunited for Season 5 of "Harry Wild," which returns to Acorn TV with bigger mysteries, higher stakes and a new character who could finally complicate Harry's love life.
WATCH: JANE SEYMOUR ON CHEMISTRY WITH JOE LANDO: 'THE SCREEN IS SIZZLING'
JANE SEYMOUR CONTINUES HER 75TH BIRTHDAY CELEBRATION WITH HER 'DR. QUINN, MEDICINE WOMAN' CO-ST
Seymour stars as Harriet "Harry" Wild and also serves as an executive producer on the hit show.
Their on-screen reunion is rooted in a friendship that's outlasted Hollywood odds.
When Fox News Digital asked how they've stayed close all these years, Seymour reflected on the bond they built while filming the hit Western drama.
"Wow, I mean, that's a really interesting question," she said. "We worked together for seven years and we kind of fell for one another in the pilot, rather famously, for a brief time. So, we knew each other really, really well, better than on screen."
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The pair eventually realized they were better off as friends, but Lando said one thing about Seymour has remained exactly the same since their "Dr. Quinn" days.
"This inexhaustible flipping energy," he said. "She just goes, goes and goes."
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Comparing Seymour to the Energizer Bunny, Lando recalled filming long production days while the actress was pregnant with twins.
WATCH: JANE SEYMOUR TEASES ON-SCREEN ROMANCE WITH JOE LANDO IN ‘HARRY WILD’ SHAKEUP
"45, pregnant with twins. We're doing 12-hour-plus days sometimes," he said. "I'd start feeling myself getting a little worn, and I would look over at her… suck it up, get out there and do the job. And that hasn't changed about her."
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Seymour credits her seemingly endless energy to one simple thing — loving what she does.
When asked where her legendary stamina comes from, Seymour didn't hesitate.
"I know people keep asking me why, and I just say, because I love what I do," she said. "I just do, you know, and then when I stop, I sleep."
AMC Global Media's "Harry Wild" Season 5 streams exclusively on Acorn TV.
'Vampire Diaries' star Ian Somerhalder says leaving Hollywood for farming 'shifted my life forever'
Ian Somerhalder reflected on how leaving Hollywood behind and embracing his passion for farming transformed the course of his life.
The 47-year-old, who rose to fame starring in the hit television series "Lost" and "The Vampire Diaries," has mostly stepped away from acting in recent years, turning his attention to advocating for regenerative agriculture, a farming approach focused on rebuilding soil health and restoring ecosystems.
During a recent interview with Fox News Digital, Somerhalder, who is starring in the new documentary "Groundswell," recalled an eye-opening trip to Zimbabwe, where he witnessed how regenerative farming practices could revive degraded landscapes and reshape entire ecosystems.
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"It shifted my life forever," Somerhalder said.
Somerhalder's environmental documentary "Groundswell," directed by Josh and Rebecca Tickell, was released earlier this month. "Groundswell" acts as the third installment in their regenerative agriculture documentary series following "Kiss the Ground," which was released in 2020 and "Common Ground" in 2023.
Somerhalder, who was born and raised in rural Louisiana, previously told Fox News Digital that he comes from a long line of farmers dating back to the 1700s. Growing up, he said he witnessed two very different approaches to agriculture. While one side of his family practiced regenerative methods, other relatives relied on conventional farming and crop-dusting operations.
Years later, after finding success in Hollywood, Somerhalder met regenerative agriculture pioneer Allan Savory, who invited him to Zimbabwe to see his work firsthand. The actor went on to travel to the South African country with a small film crew to document Savory's land restoration efforts.
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Living in military tents on Savory's property, Somerhalder said the experience immersed him in both the landscape and the principles of regenerative agriculture.
WATCH HERE: ‘VAMPIRE DIARIES’ STAR IAN SOMERHALDER REVEALS THE AFRICA TRIP THAT ‘SHIFTED MY LIFE FOREVER’
"That's how it started, where I realized and saw firsthand how regenerative practices cannot just fix land, heal them, and rebuild them into verdant oasis, like wetlands, grasslands," he said. "And then once I learned from Alan that grasslands have the potential to be the most enormous carbon sucks right? That's how the world used to work."
"And I learned that at like 32-years-old," Somerhalder added. "I got the best form of it. Living in a freaking military tent."
TOM GREEN DITCHES HOLLYWOOD FOR FARM LIFE AFTER WILD RIDE TO FAME
"And popping malaria pills, which as you know gives you most just like horrific, insane dreams and night sweats." he added. "And you're dealing with that, you're getting all this amazing footage and you're learning and seeing things for the first time — like really seeing the way the world works. And seeing where we're going."
Somerhalder recalled waking before dawn to hear scratching outside his tent. He remembered that by morning, he found "huge lion prints just outside of your tent."
"It was real," he said, emphasizing that experience underscored just how immersed he had become in the environment he was documenting.
The footage Somerhalder captured during the trip ultimately became some of the earliest material used in the 2020 documentary "Kiss the Ground," which he believes helped launch a broader conversation about regenerative agriculture
"That was the film that changed all of our lives forever and ever and ever," he said. And set fire to a course that would effectively, for lack of a better word, shift and alter the course of history, agricultural history in the United States of America."
"Kiss the Ground" became the first of three regenerative agriculture documentaries Somerhalder would help champion. Somerhalder executive produced and appeared in 2023's "Common Ground," a follow-up documentary to "Kiss the Ground" that was helmed by the first film's directors Josh and Rebecca Tickell and expanded on regenerative agriculture by examining the U.S. food system.
AMANDA SEYFRIED OPENS UP ABOUT WHAT SAVED HER FROM HOLLYWOOD’S DANGEROUS PARTY SCENE
Somerhalder also served as an executive producer for the third and final installment in the trilogy, "Groundswell," which premiered on June 5.
WATCH HERE: ‘VAMPIRE DIARIES’ STAR IAN SOMERHALDER SAYS THERE'S ONLY ONE THING HE MISSES ABOUT HOLLYWOOD
The projects signaled a new direction for Somerhalder, who has largely traded acting roles for environmental advocacy.
Reflecting on his career shift, Somerhalder said there's only one aspect of Hollywood he truly misses.
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"I don't miss the work," he said. "I loved what I did. I did it for a long time. I miss the people."
Somerhalder continued, "When you're in a production — whether it's a little teeny tiny low-budget movie or a massive, massive show like 'The Vampire Diaries'...Now mind you, our budget comparatively speaking to what people have now, it was like almost nothing but we had like almost a half a million square feet of stages, we had a lot of stuff. We were our own city. We had our own water, own security, own fire, there's everything, right? So you're living in this small city with like 400 amazing humans."
"And I do miss that," he added.
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While Somerhalder said he misses the camaraderie of working on film and television sets, he believes the industry has undergone a cultural shift since his acting days that that reinforced his decision to move on.
"It's changed a great deal since I was an actor," he said. "It's really politics became such a hotbed on these sets, and it's very divided."
"There was no division when I was there, it was all just together and that's sort of like where humans really work their best, you know?"Somerhalder continued. "So, I'm happy I got out when I did, and I got to go do these other things that have really been so magical."
Today, Somerhalder's life looks far different from his days on the set of "The Vampire Diaries." Much of his time is spent on the farm he shares with his wife Nikki Reed, where the couple has embraced a lifestyle centered on nature, sustainability and raising their family.
Somerhalder credited the 38-year-old "Twilight" star with sharing his passion for the land from the very beginning of their relationship.
"She is an amazing human, like this earth goddess," he said of Reed. "She's a very powerful force, has become an unbelievable equestrian and taking care of managing a lot. Managing a farm is a lot, even tiny ones, right? We had a much bigger one, which is really insane. And now just finding the proper management on that — that helps big time."
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"But from the very beginning, I had 1,200 acres in Georgia," Somerhalder continued. "And I think the first three years we were together — I have it written down this cute little book of memories — but I think we spent 125 days in the Airstream on our land."
"Out of whatever, you know, 500 plus days, right? It's a lot. So it was always that. And I have so many pictures of us and the dogs," he added. "Being just half-naked for days on end in the middle of nowhere, grounding, connecting to the land. And that, I think, is where people really want to go."
Somerhalder said building a life on the farm with Reed, with whom he shares two children, has also shaped the couple's approach to raising their family.
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"Family is about being present," he said. "Family is going back to nature and being present. It is hard right now for people to put these things down. It's hard. And I think it's starting to change now. People are realizing, 'Whoa, whoa whoa whoa, I need to be way more connected.'"
"This is a natural cycle for human beings to want to connect more with the earth," he continued. "So that feeds into what? Regenerative agriculture, human health, that's families coming together and grounding themselves to the earth and getting whatever sunlight they can, changing their practices to start taking plastics out of their home and out of the gardens and reconnecting. So this is all very, very powerful and positive."
WATCH HERE: ‘VAMPIRE DIARIES’ STAR IAN SOMERHALDER SHARES HOW ‘EARTH GODDESS’ WIFE NIKKI REED CHANGED HIS LIFE OFF-SCREEN
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Looking ahead, Somerhalder told Fox News Digital he is optimistic that future generations will continue embracing regenerative agriculture and reconnecting with nature. Despite concerns about technology and an increasingly divided world, he believes today's children have reason to be hopeful.
"The children of this generation, everyone thinks they're doomed," Somerhalder said. "The children of this generation are beyond lucky at this point, which is great."
"Sure, they're sucked up in social media and video games and the world's a little topsy-turvy right now," he continued. "It will find equilibrium. And once we rebuild the ground that we stand on, everything will follow suit."
"The future is bright," Somerhalder added. "Get your cheap sunglasses."
Boy stumbles on strange beach object identified as rare 1.8M-year-old fossil
An 11-year-old boy in England recently made an unusual beach day discovery: an ancient elephant tooth from a species that lived about 1.8 million years ago.
Charlie Orchard-Lisle found the tooth at East Lane beach in Bawdsey, a coastal village near Ipswich, Suffolk, in May, news agency SWNS reported.
Found near the shoreline, the specimen was later identified as an upper left molar measuring about 4 inches wide.
TRAVELERS CAN HUNT FOR MILLION-YEAR-OLD FOSSILS AND MORE VALUABLE TREASURES IN THESE SPOTS
It once belonged to Anancus arvernensis, an extinct relative of modern elephants, including today's African bush elephant.
Photos of the strange, rock-like object show that the tooth's enamel has been preserved and mineralized over millions of years.
According to Charlie's mother, Eleanor Orchard-Lisle, the timing of the discovery was particularly striking.
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"Basically, we were walking along, and 10 minutes before, my son Charlie was saying how much he loves elephants," said Eleanor, according to SWNS.
"We were walking along and could see this thing by the lapping waves. So it must have been quite distinctive, because it caught both our eyes. So we picked it up, and my husband came over."
The mother said the family immediately recognized the object "was something different."
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"It had a different feel to it," she said.
The family isn't sure where the tooth came from, but Eleanor Orchard-Lisle suggested that it had been buried within a Red Crag cliff, a fossil-rich geological formation found along parts of England's eastern coast.
The tooth may have then been flushed out by erosion before appearing on the beach.
"It is quite incredible, and I can't believe you can find something so old that existed 1.8 million years ago and then just rocks up on the beach," said Eleanor Orchard-Lisle, per the SWNS report.
The Suffolk schoolboy joins a growing list of children who have stumbled upon remarkable ancient finds.
In late April, a group of first-grade students in Norway uncovered a rare Viking-age sword while exploring a field.
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At around the same time, an 8-year-old boy in Israel discovered a 1,700-year-old fragment of a Roman statuette while visiting the Ramon Crater in the Negev Desert.
FBI warns Microsoft users about passwordless scam
The security step many of us trust most may not protect us the way we think. The FBI is warning about an emerging phishing-as-a-service platform called Kali365. It targets Microsoft 365 accounts, including Outlook, Teams and OneDrive.
That alone sounds bad. The scarier part is how it works. This scam can get into your account without stealing your password. Even with multifactor authentication turned on, one wrong device-code approval could give a criminal access.
Here's how the scam works, why it can slip past MFA and what you can do to protect your Microsoft account.
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NEW FBI WARNING REVEALS PHISHING ATTACKS HITTING PRIVATE CHATS
Kali365 is a phishing-as-a-service platform. In other words, crooks can subscribe to it and use ready-made tools to attack Microsoft 365 accounts. The FBI says Kali365 was first seen in April 2026 and has mainly spread through Telegram. The platform gives attackers access to AI-generated phishing messages, automated campaign templates, tracking dashboards and tools that capture OAuth tokens. That last part is the key.
OAuth tokens are digital access keys. They can let an app stay connected to your Microsoft account without asking for your password every time. They are useful when the right app uses them. They are dangerous when a scammer steals them.
Most phishing scams try to steal your password. Kali365 takes a different route. The attack abuses Microsoft's device code login process. You may have seen something similar when signing into a streaming app on a smart TV. A screen shows a short code. Then you enter that code on another device to approve the sign-in.
That process is legitimate. The scam begins when a criminal starts the sign-in from their own device and tricks you into approving it. You may see a phishing email that looks like it came from a trusted cloud service or document-sharing tool. The message includes a code and tells you to visit a real Microsoft verification page.
That real Microsoft page is what makes this so sneaky. The web address can look right. Your password manager may not object. The page may feel safe. But once the code gets entered, you may unknowingly authorize the attacker's device. From there, the attacker can capture access and refresh tokens. That can open the door to Outlook, Teams and OneDrive without your password or another MFA prompt.
QR CODE EMAIL SCAM TARGETS EMPLOYEE REVIEWS
A scam like this can hit anyone with Microsoft 365 access. Still, small businesses should pay close attention. Think about what sits inside a typical work account. Email threads. Invoices. Shared files. Employee chats. Vendor contacts. Customer details. Calendar invites. One compromised account can give a criminal a very believable voice.
A scammer who gets into Outlook can study how you write. They can send messages from your real account. They can ask coworkers to pay fake invoices, share files or reset passwords. That to me is scary because the scam may not look like a scam anymore. It may come from someone you know.
The FBI describes the scheme in a clear sequence. First, the victim gets a phishing email that pretends to come from a trusted productivity or file-sharing service. Next, the email provides a device code and tells the victim to enter it on a legitimate Microsoft verification page.
Then, the victim enters the code and unknowingly approves the attacker's device. After that, the attacker captures OAuth access and refresh tokens. Finally, the attacker can access Microsoft 365 services such as Outlook, Teams and OneDrive without needing the victim's password.
The biggest warning sign is an unexpected request to enter a Microsoft device code. Be suspicious if an email tells you to enter a code for a file, voicemail, invoice or shared document you did not request.
Also, watch for urgency. Scammers love messages that push you to act fast. They may claim a document will expire, a voicemail is waiting, or an account needs verification.
Another clue is context. If you were not trying to sign in to a device, do not enter a device code. That one habit can stop this scam before it starts.
In response to CyberGuy, Microsoft said customers should follow the FBI's recommendations as well as Microsoft's published best practices to protect against Kali365 and similar scams.
The company also said it works to disrupt cybercriminal ecosystems tied to phishing-as-a-service and account takeover activity. Microsoft pointed to recent Digital Crimes Unit actions involving Fake ONNX, RaccoonO365 and Tycoon 2FA as examples of those broader efforts.
A few smart habits can help you spot fake device-code requests, reduce your exposure and follow the FBI’s guidance for limiting this type of attack.
Only enter a Microsoft device code when you personally started the sign-in. If the code arrives through an email, Teams message or random document link, stop.
Do not use links inside surprise messages. Open your browser and go directly to Microsoft or your company's Microsoft 365 portal.
Review recent sign-ins, connected devices and active sessions. If you see a location, device or app you do not recognize, take action right away.
If you think you entered a code by mistake, sign out of all sessions and revoke suspicious app access. Then change your password and contact your IT team.
Do not turn off multifactor authentication because of this scam. MFA still blocks many account attacks. This threat shows why you also need to be careful with approval prompts and device codes.
Using strong antivirus software can help detect phishing pages, malicious links and suspicious downloads before they cause damage. Get my picks for the best 2026 antivirus protection winners for your Windows, Mac, Android & iOS devices at Cyberguy.com
Scammers often build convincing phishing messages with personal details found online. A data removal service can help reduce the amount of your information available on people-search sites and data broker databases. Check out my top picks for data removal services and get a free scan to find out if your personal information is already out on the web by visiting Cyberguy.com
Employees may know not to type passwords into strange pages. Many have never been warned about device codes. Make this specific scam part of your security training.
The FBI says restricting device code flow can help prevent or limit this style of attack. IT teams should create a conditional access policy to block device code flow for all users, with limited exceptions for required business processes.
Before blocking device code flow, the FBI recommends auditing current usage to identify legitimate business needs. That can help prevent disruptions for employees or systems that rely on this sign-in method.
The FBI also recommends blocking authentication transfer policies. This can help prevent users from transferring authentication from computers to mobile devices.
If your organization cannot fully restrict device code flow, the FBI recommends excluding emergency access accounts to prevent lockouts. That step should be handled carefully by your IT or security team.
If you were targeted or compromised, report it to the FBI's Internet Crime Complaint Center at IC3.gov. Include phishing emails, email headers, suspicious login times, IP addresses, locations, unauthorized devices and active sessions.
Move quickly.
This is the kind of scam that can fool smart people because it uses a real Microsoft sign-in page to pull off something criminal. That is what makes Kali365 so dangerous. It can turn a trusted security step into a trap, especially when the code did not come from a signed-in user. The big takeaway here is to slow down before entering any Microsoft device code. If a code shows up through an unexpected email, text or Teams message, stop and go directly to the account instead. Do not approve a sign-in unless it was started on purpose. A few extra seconds of caution can help keep criminals out of Outlook, Teams, OneDrive and everything connected to them.
Have you ever received a Microsoft code or login prompt you did not request, and did it look convincing enough to make you pause? Let us know by writing to us at Cyberguy.com
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Swedish World Cup defender's wife hopped on a mechanical bull, Eleonora Incardona checks in & hotdog cookies?
Welcome to Sunday Screencaps. Kicking things off for us today is Maja Lindelof. She's the wife of Swedish defender Victor Lindelof and has been labeled the "Premier League's hottest WAG."
This wasn’t a title that was just handed out to her one day. There's science behind it or at least the use of an app that makes it sound more official. Maja's score on this app was a 9.7 out of 10.
Walking around with that high of a score could get to some, it doesn’t appear to have gotten to Lindelof's wife. She's embracing all that comes with her World Cup visit to the U.S., just like the fans and influencers are.
Last week, Maja enjoyed some Texas nightlife. That included hopping on a mechanical bull, because everyone knows if you're in Texas and not hopping on a mechanical bull, you're missing out.
'WORLD'S SEXIEST FAN' DROPS HER WORLD CUP ANTHEM AND HERE'S WHY YOU NEVER ASSIST A BIKE THIEF
"Still a bit drunk while posting this, might delete later," she wrote in the caption of her mechanical bull ride video.
After initially sitting on the bull backwards, Maja gets turned around, and embraces a piece of Texas that I'm sure even some Texans take for granted.
- Jim T in San Diego writes:
A priest friend of mine had a going away dinner at his parish last night - he still owes the Navy another three years (he felt the calling to ministry while already a Navy officer) and reports back as a chaplain this summer.
As I was pulling into the parking lot at the church in the suburbs of San Diego, I noticed two armed security guards - one of whom is a buddy from the Boy Scouts. Last time I saw him was about two years ago when I was pulling into the parking lot of this funky, old-fashioned candle shop in Rancho Santa Fe that was closing after a couple decades in business and I wanted to get my wife a birthday present. It turns out that the candle shop shared a driveway with a synagogue.
My buddy was telling me last night that private security business for houses of worship is through the roof. Of course, we just had a mosque shot up a few weeks ago in San Diego, and a few years ago the same at a synagogue nearby.
But what a sad state of affairs that people need armed guards to watch over them while we worship.
Wondering if anyone else in SC Nation has this situation at their place of worship?
- Jim T in San Diego writes:
Coming out of church dinner last evening, saw this. Never fails to be impressive.
- Scott from Henderson Nevada writes:
Hi Sean,
Long time reader, first time email.
I feel like someone should bring up how ridiculous the World Cup coverage of the USA game last night was when they kept emphasizing "Türkiye" (Yes, my email autocorrect adds all the extra punctuation above the word.). It would be one thing is we referred to Germany as "Deutchland" or Japan as "Nihon"…why is Fox arbitrarily changing how we say Turkey…IMO they just sounded like ass clowns all night….
Cheers!
- Jon writes:
Sean,
Did I miss something? Won’t Screencaps going dark on Saturday end the consecutive streak? All streaks have to end sometime but this looks like going out with a whimper instead of a bang. No grabbing the bug out bag ahead of a Cat 5 hurricane. No digging out from 5 feet of lake effect snow. Even being conscripted into the Viking longboat rowing team during the World Cup would be acceptable.
Oh well.
SeanJo
Hey Jon, I'm just the reliever. I toe the rubber when I'm asked to do so. The decision to go dark on Saturday wasn't mine. I believe the last streak came to an end with a whimper as well.
- Rick writes:
Happy Friday Sean,
I'm no big 'futboller', hooligan, or soccer purist of any kind, but I keep an eye on the international level of the qualifying leading up to the World Cup finals and then I find the tournament itself entertaining to watch, usually. I can appreciate plenty of persons not being interested in the game as soccer is rather alien to most sports fans in the States, but being interested in the game because of who's there is as bad as watching the Super Bowl for the commercials, a complete waste of time that misses the entire point of the event. I guess we just have opposite interests in the World Cup games.
When I watch a sport, I'm only interested in the action on the field and could not possibly care less as to who is in the stands and how they are reacting (never forget the horrific impact of one T Swift on pro football games lest we repeat that error). I understand giving some general camera shots of the fans or a family member of a player who just did something great (or terrible), but these camera shots of those poser 'celebrities', most of whom I'd guess did not have to pay anything to get in unlike the exorbitant costs fans have been stuck with and have likely observed no soccer of any kind until being in the stadium, are an obnoxious waste of time. The other side of it is that other than for injuries, soccer doesn't exactly stop until halftime/fulltime is called (these ridiculous 'hydration breaks' not withstanding), so every second spent on the stands is missing something happening out on the field.
It's unfortunate you haven't really watched team USA as they've been fun to watch. My recollections are that they typically have played a mostly defensive game hoping to create a few counterattack chances per game. This time, though, they've played an attacking, aggressive style that has resulted in them scoring far more goals than they have in past World Cups by this point, and the guys themselves seem to be a great group of teammates to each other which is always great to see. Who knows how far they'll get, but it should be a fun ride as long as it lasts. Go Team USA!
As for the clock business, again I'm no expert on soccer, but it's a peculiarity of the game that once the clock starts it goes until the referee stops it for halftime/fulltime unlike most sports here where the clock stops for every whistle or infraction. The added/stoppage team is an attempt to add time lost due to fouls, free kicks, resets injuries, and so on in order to still have played approximately the correct amount of time for the game. A soccer referee has far more discretion and individual judgement that can impact a game than a baseball umpire or football ref, so it's up to the referee to decide when enough game time has elapsed.
Keep up the good work as you spell Joe for the next week. Have yourself a great weekend, and I hope the broader FoxNews audience you're hearing from now is treating you well.
SeanJo
Hey Rick, thanks for reaching out. Just to be clear, I'm not interested in the sport of soccer at all. I don't watch it. I don't think the watching the Super Bowl for the commercials comparison is entirely accurate. I'd probably have to watch some soccer and choose to focus on the action in the stands for that to be the case.
That's not the case. I catch all of the action in the stands, which I choose to focus on, on social media. But if you enjoy the sport, have at it. It's not for me. I'm not watching the Super Bowl for the commercials. I will only tune in if the USMNT goes on a deep run. That's it, those are my terms.
At some point, after years of trying to make it a thing, you have to have some results.
- Drew in Katy, Texas writes:
Sean,
Thanks for filling in for Joe. Joe showed a massive "steak rack" as he called it on Thursday. That looks like a commercial sized Santa Maria grill. The crank that raises and lowers the grill relative to the coals is a common feature.
WAIT... WHO IS ACTUALLY USING HIGHWAY REST STOP BBQ GRILLS?
A typical sized Santa Maria grill design is more like this: https://woodfiresmokers.com/products/santa-maria-grill or this: https://heritagebackyard.com/collections/santa-maria-grills-with-casters/products/commercial-portable-santa-maria-bbq-grill
The television series "Life of Fire" Season 1 Episode 10 explains the whole back story on Santa Maria grills.
I have a basic welding shop in my barn. My next project out there is to custom build one. The steel for that grill is going to be a great Father’s Day present . . .
##########
That's all for the last Sunday of June. I have to get the rest of this day going. Toss some meat on the grill and send it my way. I'll be resuming my relief duties on Monday through Thursday.
Keep the inbox full sean.joseph@outkick.com.
If you haven't or wouldn't try the hotdog cookies, what's the strangest combination you have tried and was it any good? Let me know.
You can also follow me on Twitter and over on Instagram if you'd like. Feel free to slide into the DMs.
TNA Wrestling invites viral World Cup fan to Slammiversary: 'This will be fun!'
The viral World Cup fan, known as Freddy, has traveled all over the U.S. to get the full American experience as he dives into his hardcore soccer fandom.
On Sunday, he’s getting a different treat.
COMPLETE PRO WRESTLING COVERAGE ON FOX NEWS DIGITAL
Total Nonstop Action Wrestling (TNA) invited Freddy to its Slammiversary pay-per-view event in Boston at the Agganis Arena. Freddy said the TNA event will be the appetizer to his attendance at Germany’s knockout round match against Paraguay.
"The next two days in Boston will be super exciting. Not only are we going to the Germany match on the 29th, but we’re also going to a wrestling show tomorrow," he wrote on X. "We’re attending @ThisIsTNA Slammiversary and we might even get the chance to meet Jeff and Matt Hardy. This will be fun!"
TNA responded, "We're excited to have you at the Agganis Arena tomorrow as we celebrate 24 years of TNA at #TNASlammiversary!"
Matt Hardy, who will be teaming with Jeff Hardy in a four-way ladder match for the TNA World Tag Team Championship, also replied to Freddy.
CLICK HERE FOR MORE SPORTS COVERAGE ON FOXNEWS.COM
"I’m so happy you’re enjoying your time in America, @FreddyLA7! Gonna make sure @ThisIsTNA has you all set up for #TNASlammiversary tomorrow. Looking forward to meeting you."
Freddy’s journey across the U.S. has been one of the World Cup figures taking hold of the tournament off the pitch. The internet has fallen in love with his exploits and his seemingly good-natured demeanor has landed him some incredible experiences.
He was also invited to the White House, Ambassador Nick Adams, who is the Special Presidential Envoy for American, Tourism, Exceptionalism and Values in the Trump administration, confirmed to Fox News Digital earlier this month.
The Hardys take on Bear Bronson and Brian Myers, The Righteous and Jason Hotch and John Skyler in the ladder match with the titles on the line. The main card begins at 4 p.m. ET.
Could 'humanmaxxing' actually help you live longer? Here's what experts say
We are officially living in the "maxxing" era.
From "looksmaxxing" to improve appearance to "sleepmaxxing" for better rest, these viral terms all point to the same goal: squeezing every ounce of potential out of a specific trait or habit.
With a growing focus on optimizing wellness and maximizing longevity, the trend has evolved into what's known as "humanmaxxing," sparking a bigger question: How far can people go to optimize the human body?
ANTI-AGING BENEFITS LINKED TO ONE SURPRISING HEALTH HABIT
While there is no single definition of humanmaxxing, the trend generally refers to efforts to optimize health, performance and longevity through a combination of lifestyle habits, health tracking, supplements and, in some cases, more experimental interventions.
For some, the movement begins with biohacking. According to Dave Asprey, a Texas-based wellness expert who refers to himself as the "father of biohacking," optimizing your body starts with changing your environment.
Asprey has defined biohacking as "the art and science of changing the environment around you or inside you so that you have full control of your own biology."
COULD HUMANS LIVE TO BE 150 YEARS OLD? GENETICIST SHARES WHY IT MAY BE POSSIBLE
His public advice focuses on boosting cellular energy through everyday choices like intermittent fasting, high-fat diets, red-light therapy and supplement routines.
"My goal right now is 180 years, because I'm doing something about it now instead of waiting," he once said.
Others have embraced a more data-driven approach. Tech entrepreneur Bryan Johnson, creator of the multimillion-dollar longevity project Blueprint in Los Angeles, argues that optimizing the body means removing human error from health decisions and instead relying on medical data.
"Methodically, we sought to build an algorithm with science and data that could better care for me than I can myself," Johnson wrote on his website. "My mind did not have the authority to override the algorithm."
THINKING ABOUT PEPTIDES? DOCTORS REVEAL KEY DOS AND DON’TS AS ‘WILD WEST’ MARKET GROWS
Johnson's routine involves tracking hundreds of health metrics, eating a precisely measured diet, taking dozens of supplements, and undergoing advanced medical treatments in an effort to reduce his biological age.
CLICK HERE FOR MORE HEALTH STORIES
At the far end of the spectrum are those investing in technologies aimed at pushing the limits of human performance.
London-based tech investor Christian Angermayer recently described humanmaxxing as a strategy toward human maximization.
"I don't think we should become something different, because I think humans are awesome, but I think we can maximize the potential [that] is already in us," he said in an interview with The New York Times.
Angermayer's investment firm, Apeiron Investment Group, focuses on technologies intended to help people "live longer, healthier and more fulfilling lives." He also founded atai Life Sciences, a biotechnology company that develops psychedelic treatments for mental health conditions that are currently being evaluated in clinical trials.
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As interest in humanmaxxing grows, mainstream health experts urge consumers to separate evidence-based wellness practices from experimental interventions.
Public guidance from the National Institute on Aging notes that while some anti-aging therapies have shown promise in laboratory research, there is not yet sufficient evidence that they can safely extend human life.
Clinical experts also caution that extreme self-experimentation can bypass the rigorous safety standards applied to conventional medical treatments.
TEST YOURSELF WITH OUR LATEST LIFESTYLE QUIZ
According to the Endocrine Society, taking substances such as testosterone or growth hormone without a medical need can lead to serious health risks, including cardiovascular complications and long-term disruption of the body's chemical balance.
While many humanmaxxing habits overlap with standard healthy lifestyle practices, experts say consumers should be cautious of expensive or experimental interventions that promise dramatic anti-aging or longevity benefits without strong scientific evidence.
Cuban regime's US victims must not be forgotten: Justice should not have a time limit
As Americans once again witness the realities of the U.S. relationship with the Cuban regime, it is worth remembering that behind every discussion of foreign policy, sanctions, or diplomacy are real victims and real families whose lives were forever changed.
These victims include American families.
For decades, the family of American pilot Rafael del Pino has carried the burden of a loss that never truly healed. According to historical records, Del Pino was arrested, imprisoned, and executed by the Cuban regime. His family was left with grief, unanswered questions, and a painful search for justice that continues to this day.
For many people, these events may sound like distant history. They are not.
For the children, grandchildren, and loved ones left behind, the consequences of those actions remain very much alive. The passage of time does not erase loss. It does not erase trauma. And it does not diminish the responsibility to acknowledge what happened.
The recent legal action seeking accountability for Del Pino's execution is about far more than a courtroom proceeding. It is about recognition. It is about ensuring that the suffering endured by one family is not forgotten. It is about affirming a principle that should unite all Americans regardless of political affiliation: victims matter, and their stories deserve to be heard.
Today, Cuba is once again at the center of public discussion. News headlines frequently focus on political developments, economic challenges, and debates about U.S.-Cuba relations. Those conversations are important. But they should not come at the expense of remembering the individuals whose lives were destroyed by political repression.
Too often, the victims become footnotes in larger geopolitical debates. Their names fade from public memory while governments, policies, and political narratives take center stage. Yet it is the human stories that remind us what is truly at stake.
As an attorney, I believe deeply in the rule of law. I also believe that justice serves a broader purpose than simply resolving disputes. Justice recognizes human dignity. Justice acknowledges suffering. And justice helps ensure that history cannot simply be rewritten or ignored.
The Del Pino family's pursuit of accountability reflects a truth that many families affected by authoritarian regimes understand all too well: the search for justice rarely follows a convenient timeline. Sometimes it takes years.
RUBIO BLASTS COMMUNIST CUBAN REGIME AS NJ TROOPER’S KILLER REMAINS FREE
Sometimes it takes decades. But the desire for truth and recognition never disappears.
Remembering these stories is not about reopening old wounds. It is about honoring those who suffered and ensuring that future generations understand the human cost of repression.
A society that forgets its victims risks repeating the mistakes of the past.
Regardless of where one stands politically, there should be room for compassion toward families who continue to seek answers and accountability for profound losses. Their pursuit of justice is not an act of division. It is an affirmation of the values that define us as a nation: respect for human life, belief in individual dignity, and commitment to truth.
The legal process will ultimately take its course. But beyond the courtroom, there remains a simple moral responsibility.
We must remember the victims. We must listen to their families. And we must never allow the passage of time to erase either their suffering or their humanity.