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Saturday, November 15, 2025

CYBERSECURITY- It Does Matter if Your Account Gets Hacked

More and more people are recognizing that staying secure is important while they are online. However, according to the National Cybersecurity Association there are people who feel that it doesn’t matter if their device or account gets hacked. They may think that their information is not important or that their online data is not critical. However, scammers and cybercriminals can use the most innocent of information to steal from you or others.

Your Facebook account might appear to be innocent, but it can be used against you. While you might only keep up with your family and friends on Facebook, if you overshare the details of your life (such as mentioning when you are taking vacation) someone lurking in the background can use that information to break into your home while you are gone. Your social media passwords are very important because if someone gains access to your account through your password, they can impersonate you a try to scam your friends. Scammers have also been known to take over social media accounts, changing the passwords so that the owners no longer have control of the accounts, using them for their scams or other criminal purposes. So, long secure passwords, 16 or more characters, using a mix of upper- and lower-case letters, numbers and special characters, secured in a password manager is an important step to take.

Other online accounts that are important to protect include financial accounts such as your bank accounts, your credit card accounts, and retirement accounts. Protecting your account credentials such as your password and account numbers can save you a ton of grief. If a scammer only has your account number they can use it on applications, forms, and fake documents to make a fraudulent claim look more legitimate. But if the scammer has your account number and the routing number (found on checks issued by the bank) or the name of the bank or online password they can do much more,

·         Set up payments for goods or services appearing to come from your account.

·         Attempt transfers out of your account through ACH debits or other bank transfer methods.

·         Create counterfeit checks that appear to draw from your account.

·         Use the account for laundering activity, depositing funds and moving them out again to obscure the trail.

·         Make online purchases where limited verification is required.

·         Apply for additional accounts or services using your account as proof of legitimacy, for example, opening a secondary account to stash stolen funds before moving them into cryptocurrency or offshore.

·         Pretend to be from your bank and contact you to collect more personal information. That follow-up scam can be used to harvest even more personally identifiable information (PII) or access details for other bank accounts.

Protecting the usernames, passwords, and account numbers of all of your online accounts is important to protecting your security and privacy no matter how trivial the account may seem. Also, protect any documents that have bank account, credit card account numbers or numbers such as your Social Security number, Medicare number by keeping them in a secure location and destroying bank/credit card statements, or other documents with those account numbers when you are finished with them.

 

Remember,

·         Use long, complex passwords stored in a secure password manager.

·         Use unique passwords for each of your accounts. DO NOT use the same password for multiple accounts!

·         Use multifactor authentication (MFA) for all of your online accounts.

 

 

 

 

 

National Cybercrime Alliance:

https://www.staysafeonline.org/articles/6-cybersecurity-myths-debunked

 

Identity Theft Resource Center:

https://www.idtheftcenter.org/post/what-can-a-scammer-do-with-your-banking-information/

 

Social Security Administration:

https://www.ssa.gov/pubs/EN-05-10064.pdf

 

 

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