People encouraged to better secure online accounts following Yahoo breach by Online Security
Residents who use Yahoo
Mail are being encouraged by the S.C. Department of Consumer
Affairs to take action to secure their online accounts following the
announcement last month of a massive breach.
During the last two weeks of September, Yahoo
announced that at least 500 million user accounts had been compromised.
An investigation by Yahoo following suspicions of
an attack in July uncovered a far larger, allegedly state-sponsored attack in
recent weeks, according to the Associated Press.
“We take these types of breaches very seriously and will
determine how this occurred and who is responsible,” the FBI said in a
statement last week.
Given the importance most people place on protecting
personal information, the Department
of Consumer Affairs is encouraging Yahoo Mail users to take
action by following several tips, said Megan Stockhausen, communications
coordinator with the agency.
• Change the account password and security questions
immediately. Use strong, creative passwords (uppercase, lowercase and special
characters) and don’t share them with anyone. Also, don’t use the same
passwords or security questions for multiple accounts, especially when using an
email address as the login name on a site.
• Watch out for phishing attempts, which is defined by
asking for personal or sensitive information via a phone call, text or email is
a tactic used by scammers. Never reply to texts, pop-ups, or emails that ask
for verification of personal information. Avoid clicking on links or
downloading attachments from suspicious emails or texts.
• Closely monitor financial and benefits statements/accounts.
Check all monthly statements and account activity, especially for financial
accounts saved as payment options on internet merchant sites.
Review them carefully and notify the financial
institution/provider as soon as an unauthorized or suspicious item is spotted.
• Consider a fraud alert and security freeze. Scammers may
use the stolen information to open new accounts.
A fraud alert and security freeze are free security measures
for a credit report. A fraud alert tells a business accessing the report to
take extra steps to verify that the person holding the account is the one
seeking its goods/services.
When a security freeze is in place, no one can access the
report without the account holder approving it.
Stockhausen said
these tips can help anyone trying to secure any personal online information.
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