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François
François

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Be alerted if your account is compromised

Have you ever heard about the https://haveibeenpwned.com/ website? Or https://monitor.firefox.com/?

You just have to enter your email address and check if you have an account that has been compromised in a data breach.

If one account has been compromised, it means people know that your email address: john.dohn@mail.com was using this password 08october94! on a website. You need to change your password on this website quickly obviously, but it also means that anyone can try the combination on a different website.

What if you use the same email address and the same password on another website?

Let's say I am registering to a bad and small website https://i-love-eating-apples.com I don't care. Ok, quick registering: john.dohn@mail.com and 08october94. Easy password to remember as it is my birthdate :-)

But that's also my password to my Facebook account as it is easy to remember :-)

And my password to my email account :-)

Ok, now imagine someone breaks into https://i-love-eating-apples.com because it was badly secure and get every user information (email/passwords). Why would someone spend time to secure such a website? It is only for fun...

Well, someone has your password and can try it on different websites. Emails providers, social media, messenger apps, etc.

Lessons taught?

Use one password per website (use a password manager). Even if a website is compromised and your account as well, it doesn't impact your other accounts.

That's where https://haveibeenpwned.com/ and https://monitor.firefox.com/ are useful: to have a look at compromised accounts.

Super cool tools, but you will probably only use it once in your lifetime.

They have a less-known functionality: Be alerted if your account is compromised.

https://haveibeenpwned.com/notifyme or https://monitor.firefox.com/. Enter your email address and from now on they will alert you!

If you want to dive a little further, this resource is really great as well, have a look! https://monitor.firefox.com/security-tips

Original blog post here.

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