Like many people today, you may have visited the World Health Organization’s (WHO) website for the first time to get the latest official news on the COVID-19 crisis rocking the world this year. The global health authority has been at the center of everything recently as concerned citizens around the world seek accurate information in a sea of fake news. The WHO even set up a new WhatsApp-based health alert messaging service to provide reliable information to billions of worried people around the world as they do everything they can to reduce the impact of this major crisis. What you might not have heard is that cyberattacks against the WHO have doubled in the past month during the crisis. On March 13th, suspicious activity at the WHO was first flagged to news agency Reuters by Alexander Urbelis, a cybersecurity expert and attorney with the New York-based Blackstone Law Group, which tracks suspicious internet domain registration […]