October 04th, 2022
By Alvaro Puig
Consumer Education Specialist
Your online accounts, computer, and phone hold a lot of your personal, financial, and health information. Information that’s valuable to you — and to scammers who try to steal it. Here are five things to do to keep hackers out of your accounts and your personal business.
1. Lock down your online accounts
Your password is the key to all the personal information in your account. Make it long. Avoid common words. And don’t re-use it.
If it’s available on your accounts, turn on multi-factor authentication for an extra layer of security.
2. Secure your home Wi-Fi network
Your wireless network is the hub that connects your devices. To protect it from hackers:
encrypt it
change your default passwords
and keep it up to date
For detailed advice about how to secure your home Wi-Fi network, visit https://consumer.ftc.gov/articles/how-secure-your-home-wi-fi-network.
3. Protect your computer and phone
Once your home Wi-Fi network is secure, focus on protecting your devices.
If you use a computer to go online, make sure your security software, operating system, and Internet browser are up to date. Turn on automatic updates to keep up with the latest protections.
Keep your phone up to date, too. Visit https://consumer.ftc.gov/articles/how-protect-your-phone-hackers#Update
4. Recognize attempts to steal your personal information
Scammers try to trick you into giving them your personal information. They’ll pretend they’re with an organization you know well — like Apple or Amazon — and make up a reason they need some info from you. They’ve also impersonated FedEx, the Postal Service, the Social Security Administration, and the FTC.
If you get a phishing email or text message, report it. Visit https://consumer.ftc.gov/articles/how-recognize-and-avoid-phishing-scams#report
5. Back things up
Back up important information you have on your computer and phone. That way, if something does happen, you can recover your information. back...
Consumer Education Specialist
Your online accounts, computer, and phone hold a lot of your personal, financial, and health information. Information that’s valuable to you — and to scammers who try to steal it. Here are five things to do to keep hackers out of your accounts and your personal business.
1. Lock down your online accounts
Your password is the key to all the personal information in your account. Make it long. Avoid common words. And don’t re-use it.
If it’s available on your accounts, turn on multi-factor authentication for an extra layer of security.
2. Secure your home Wi-Fi network
Your wireless network is the hub that connects your devices. To protect it from hackers:
encrypt it
change your default passwords
and keep it up to date
For detailed advice about how to secure your home Wi-Fi network, visit https://consumer.ftc.gov/articles/how-secure-your-home-wi-fi-network.
3. Protect your computer and phone
Once your home Wi-Fi network is secure, focus on protecting your devices.
If you use a computer to go online, make sure your security software, operating system, and Internet browser are up to date. Turn on automatic updates to keep up with the latest protections.
Keep your phone up to date, too. Visit https://consumer.ftc.gov/articles/how-protect-your-phone-hackers#Update
4. Recognize attempts to steal your personal information
Scammers try to trick you into giving them your personal information. They’ll pretend they’re with an organization you know well — like Apple or Amazon — and make up a reason they need some info from you. They’ve also impersonated FedEx, the Postal Service, the Social Security Administration, and the FTC.
If you get a phishing email or text message, report it. Visit https://consumer.ftc.gov/articles/how-recognize-and-avoid-phishing-scams#report
5. Back things up
Back up important information you have on your computer and phone. That way, if something does happen, you can recover your information. back...