This post is from a suggested group
Behind the Screen: Decoding the Reality of Online Financial Crimes
Online financial crimes are not only evolving faster than most people realize, but they are also becoming more deeply integrated into everyday digital interactions, targeting unsuspecting users at moments of vulnerability. These crimes are not confined to obscure corners of the web—they are built into fake e-commerce sites, hidden behind legitimate-looking emails, and embedded in cloned banking apps. Unlike traditional crimes that involve physical entry or confrontation, online financial crimes rely on deception, automation, and scale. They exploit not just technical loopholes but human psychology, social behaviors, and a general lack of awareness among users. Cybercriminals have grown more coordinated and efficient, operating within well-organized groups that span across countries and use a combination of advanced tools, stolen databases, and social engineering tactics to execute complex financial attacks. In the starting-middle of this growing issue, platforms like internet safety for kids and sans have become essential educational tools that demystify…
Well... Wix, in their infinite stupidity has blocked me from posting anything useful to this forum now. (I was trying to post links to my own pages here as well as the github, but they've blocked me from doing that... yet still allow the spam messages that I have to filter out manually... it's very frustrating.)
So, with that said... the first pinned comment in this forum has the details for the add-ons. Also, the source code on our github page has all the working code in it to support them. There are no schematics because they're all supported items, just connect what ever it is you're looking at to the GPIO pins referenced in the code. The I2C bus is used to talk to the Sparkfun I/O expansion board... and the code specifically references the pins in it for that board. No pull ups or any other devices are needed between them.
Bill