Your password was in a data breach and is now public
Your password is now public, but your account is still secure if no one has used it. Change your password immediately on this account. Then check if you used the same password anywhere else and change those too.
A breach means your password from one service is now public. Even if that company fixed their security, your password is out there. The dangerous part isn't this one account — it's if you reused that same password on banking, email, or social media. Your job is to change the password here and everywhere else it was used.
Fix-IT-Bot will walk you through each step — just tap, no typing needed.
Skip — I just want a technicianCommon mistakes to avoid
- Changing the password to something only slightly different — attackers will guess variations
- Using the same new password on multiple accounts — this recreates the problem
- Changing only the breached account and ignoring where else you used it — the real damage comes from reuse
- Not enabling two-factor on email — email is the master key
Signs you need professional help
- You can't access the breached account to change its password
- You notice fraud or unusual activity on any of your accounts
- You were in multiple breaches and aren't sure where to start
- Your email account is compromised
Book a technician
We can fix most issues remotely in 15 minutes. Weekend appointments — book your slot and we handle the rest.
Can't fix it yourself?
Most issues are resolved remotely in 15 minutes. Weekend appointments only — no parts, no in-home visit needed.