The truck was never the interesting part.
Cyber-enabled cargo theft is easy to flatten into a familiar story: phishing, fake documents, stolen freight, messy cleanup. But the more useful read is that attackers are learning where trust lives inside modern logistics.
Loads are posted, bid on, accepted, rerouted, documented, insured, and disputed through digital workflows. That means the real target is often not the trailer. It is the broker account, carrier identity, load-board profile, mailbox rule, phone number, or dispatch approval that makes the wrong decision look legitimate.
Once that happens, the cyber event turns physical.
The load moves because the system believes it should.
Read the full AlphaHunt analysis.