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Data Breach Shield

Author: Faheem Asghar
by Faheem Asghar
Posted: Oct 03, 2020

I received an email blackmail. What should I do?

Receiving a threatening email is unpleasant enough at the best of times, but when it contains an actual password that you have used, it can feel devastating.

Seeing your password, written in black and white from a stranger is a frightening sight. It is usually accompanied by a poorly written email containing a threat to post video of you doing embarrassing things to all of your social media contacts.

Whilst most victims don’t pay the hackers, some do, and it is this small minority that fuels an entire illicit industry. If the password is right, people will sometimes give the rest of the message more gravitas than they might have, had it not contained one.

The majority of victims will copy some of the email and google it. They will then quickly see that many others have received the same one. The following advice will usually suggest that you have nothing to worry about as the hackers are bluffing and have no intention to carry out the threat. Not only that, but the footage that they claim to have of you doesn’t even exist.

Whilst this is generally true, it fails to address the elephant in the room.

You have been hacked, compromised, pwned, or breached!

Your data has been stolen, leaked and is available on the dark web.

It is currently being used as currency by criminal elements and constantly changing hands.

So… what should the advice be?

Any victim of any data breach should be proactive and urgently so.

  1. Search for breaches across every email account you have and have ever had.
  2. Change the passwords on every account. This can protect you against future pwnage
  3. Remember that "minor" breaches are doors that have been left ajar and can lead to major breaches. Treat "minor" breaches (old information that you haven’t used for a while) as seriously as you might more recent or more severe breaches like bank account details or IDs.
  4. Think about signing up for a proactive protective service like Data Breach Shield. They have a toolbox that can help you continually monitor the progression of securing your online presence.
  5. Call your bank, order replacement cards and check your statements thoroughly.
  6. Consider using a third-party password service like 1Password

We wanted to find out why consumers weren’t being more proactive and acting sooner after a breach. In most cases, there was one answer; They simply didn’t know they had been breached and presumed that the solution was complicated, expensive and they would need to go through the convoluted process of changing every password on every site they have ever used.

Customers who had received blackmailing emails including accurate passwords had a different issue. They were extremely anxious and driven to act immediately, but weren’t aware of what the solutions were or how easy and immediate they are. Our goal was simple. To find the threat and stop the threat. Introducing data Breach Shield, a one-stop-shop that is intuitive, fast and simple to use. By knowing who has breached you, when and what was accessed, consumers are empowered. Then they just need to follow a few simple steps and use our toolbox.

The customer uses our audit tool and then our toolbox to lock their digital doors. Once locked, they may return as often as they like to maintain peace of mind.

About the Author

We provide a full report on all email accounts breaches at Data Breach Shield

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Author: Faheem Asghar

Faheem Asghar

Member since: Sep 30, 2020
Published articles: 1

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