Signs Your Security Keys Were Cloned

Unauthorized logins at unfamiliar times and places suggest your security key credentials may have been extracted or replicated by an attacker.
Tips to protect your data and privacy

Unauthorized logins at unfamiliar times and places suggest your security key credentials may have been extracted or replicated by an attacker.

Recovery codes stored with your password put your 2FA setup at critical risk—separate them completely from your other security methods.

An attacker with access to your authenticator app can bypass two-factor authentication within seconds—here's how to respond and recover.

If your email appears in a data breach, check specialized databases and account security settings to determine whether two-factor backup codes were exposed.

Effective password recovery requires multiple backup methods: email, phone, and secure codes work together to prevent account takeovers.

Security questions are a weak point in your account defenses—here's how to make them nearly impossible to crack.

Password manager breaches expose your entire credential vault, but encryption and zero-knowledge architecture determine whether attackers can actually use stolen data.

Browser password storage leaves your credentials vulnerable; here's how to protect yourself.

The clearest signs your saved passwords were exposed are unexpected login alerts from services you haven't touched, password reset emails you never...

Protecting your password manager account comes down to a handful of decisive steps: create a long, unique master password that you use nowhere else,...