

- #GOOGLE ACCOUNT ACTIVITY GENERATOR#
- #GOOGLE ACCOUNT ACTIVITY ANDROID#
- #GOOGLE ACCOUNT ACTIVITY VERIFICATION#
- #GOOGLE ACCOUNT ACTIVITY PASSWORD#
#GOOGLE ACCOUNT ACTIVITY PASSWORD#
Generating a new password ensures that your account credentials are not shared with any other account it also guarantees that an older password that you might have inadvertently reused isn't part of a password breach.
#GOOGLE ACCOUNT ACTIVITY GENERATOR#
(No password manager? Try an online option like the 1Password Strong Password Generator or the LastPass Password Generator Tool.) The best way to ensure that you've nailed this requirement is to use your password manager's tools to generate a brand-new password. This configuration requires an extra investment in hardware and it definitely adds some friction to the sign-in process, but it's by far the most effective way to secure your Google account.Īlso: Best security keys in 2020: Hardware-based two-factor authenticationįirst things first: You need a strong, unique password for your Google account. That configuration places significant roadblocks in the way of even the most determined attacker.
#GOOGLE ACCOUNT ACTIVITY VERIFICATION#
Try changing the passwords on both the account and the access point, using two different, robust, non-guessable passwords, ensure the access point is not vulnerable to some exploits (just google "BrandOfYourDevice exploit" or "BrandOfYourDevice security vulnerability"), it is not accessible from the outside, and is configured for WPA2 security.For the most extreme security, add at least one physical hardware key along with the Google Authenticator app and, optionally, remove personal email addresses as a backup verification factor. This is, of course, potentially very bad.
#GOOGLE ACCOUNT ACTIVITY ANDROID#
Or you could have some "smart" device somewhere - an Android TV maybe - that's synchronized with your Google account. The most likely explanation is that you have GMail on your WiFi-connected smartphone also. Something is accessing your GMail account from your wireless Access Point, which implies it knows the access codes for both. If this is the case, the problem lies not in your Chrome browser or desktop Debian distribution, but in your home or nearby. Waiting a return as soon as assume you mean that the unknown device has your same home IP address - so, not .y but something belonging, say, to Telecom Brasil.

deb package), that was acquired when I was browsing on some harmful websites? I've not managed to encounter a guide with steps, and with a list of probable related causes for resolve the case. Or is it fruit of a infection of a possibly hidden extension on the latest 32-bit version of Google Chrome for Linux (. Obs.: Maybe this is a prank of my older brother, accessing the Debian partition with Ubuntu and infecting it with a virus / malware. Only rests for me to let unoccupied an USB Flash Drive to make a Bootable AV USB Key for scan my computer, including the Bootable AVs as Kaspersky Rescue Disk or the ESET SysRescue Linux-based Security Distributions (the best Vaccines encountered on the market, according to all my searches). I think that this symptom is uncommon and I suspect an infection, and it's the first time that I see this behavior on Linux.Ĭould someone here help me to investigate the problem? This might not be malware related, only Network issues on a last valid hypothesis. , to know if I'll discover some infection, some trace of hidden prague on my system. Maybe it's a viruse/ malware on my Debian? I'll try to scan my computer, also verifying the Debian 7 Partition with ESET SysRescue: *( security - Remove access for unknown devices in account activity - Web Applications Stack Exchange ) This below Topic, also doesn't help to resolve or remedy the problem: , and the strange described problem doesn't gone yet until todays. *( Clearing all private user data from Chrome from the command line - Ask Ubuntu )įor the default Chrome configuration, run rm -rf ~/.config/google-chrome/Default/ I've already deleted the Profile, following the below advice teached in the Ask Ubuntu Section: Illustration of the problem ( Portuguese language location) : I've recently noticed a strange comportment on my Google Chrome Browser with GMail, where suddenly appeared a connected Unknown Device, with a double connection and with the same IP than mine, looking at the GMail history Details of accesses, and I don't know where is the origin of the problem.
