You got a notification that your data was in a breach
A data breach means your information was stolen by hackers — but it doesn't mean they can actually get into your account right now. Change your password to something new and strong, and turn on two-factor authentication to lock your account down. That stops attackers from logging in even if they have your old password.
When a company gets hacked, attackers steal user information — email addresses and passwords. Your information sitting in that stolen data doesn't mean hackers can use it until they try to log in. Changing your password and turning on two-factor authentication stops them from getting access. If the same password is used on other accounts, change those too.
Fix-IT-Bot will walk you through each step — just tap, no typing needed.
Skip — I just want a technicianCommon mistakes to avoid
- Choosing a weak new password thinking it doesn't matter since the old one was stolen — your new password needs to be strong and unique
- Not turning on two-factor authentication — this is what stops hackers from getting in even with your password
- Reusing the same password across multiple accounts after the breach — if one gets hacked, they can't use it to break into everything else
Signs you need professional help
- You can't log into your account even after trying to reset the password
- You see unauthorized activity in your account that you didn't do
- The company won't send you a password reset email to check it's really you
Book a technician
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