ThreatsScam

SOCHQ Threat Intel · Scam

Fake Sign-In Page Stealing Passwords

A confirmed phishing website is disguised as a login page to trick people into handing over their username and password. If anyone in your family clicks this link, their account credentials could be stolen immediately.

What to do: Do not click any link that takes you to an unfamiliar sign-in page — if unsure, go directly to the official website by typing its address yourself, and enable two-factor authentication on important accounts.

Source: paste_monitor ↗

What this means for your family

If someone in your family gets a link that looks like a login page, it's likely a trap designed to steal passwords. The safest move is to ignore it and log in directly through the official website instead. Turning on two-factor authentication adds an extra security layer so even a stolen password can't unlock your accounts.

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Every business has a security team. Your family can too.

SOCHQ watches your home network for scams, breaches, and threats like this — and tells you in plain language what to do.

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This page is general safety guidance, not individualized security advice. When in doubt, go directly to the official source.