Email from a hacker with my password [duplicate]

The name of the pictureThe name of the pictureThe name of the pictureClash Royale CLAN TAG#URR8PPP












25
















This question already has an answer here:



  • What to do about email threats containing leaked passwords?

    2 answers



I have received an email from a hacker saying he got my email account password.
The password showed in the mail is not my account password but is a password I use sometimes.



I checked haveibeenpwned and the password don't report as leaked.



Considering :



  • This is a scam to make me pay

  • The password is a legit password I use

  • The password is not used in sensitive services (banks, socials medias, anything with credit cards information)

  • He claims to have installed a malware on my system.

What are the actions I can do? Besides changing this password on any website it is used and never use it again.










share|improve this question















marked as duplicate by Steffen Ullrich, WoJ, Rory Alsop Jan 10 at 14:05


This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.













  • 7





    Don't look for the password in haveibeenpwned, look for your email, this way you will see which leaked service was used.

    – Goufalite
    Jan 10 at 10:31
















25
















This question already has an answer here:



  • What to do about email threats containing leaked passwords?

    2 answers



I have received an email from a hacker saying he got my email account password.
The password showed in the mail is not my account password but is a password I use sometimes.



I checked haveibeenpwned and the password don't report as leaked.



Considering :



  • This is a scam to make me pay

  • The password is a legit password I use

  • The password is not used in sensitive services (banks, socials medias, anything with credit cards information)

  • He claims to have installed a malware on my system.

What are the actions I can do? Besides changing this password on any website it is used and never use it again.










share|improve this question















marked as duplicate by Steffen Ullrich, WoJ, Rory Alsop Jan 10 at 14:05


This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.













  • 7





    Don't look for the password in haveibeenpwned, look for your email, this way you will see which leaked service was used.

    – Goufalite
    Jan 10 at 10:31














25












25








25


3







This question already has an answer here:



  • What to do about email threats containing leaked passwords?

    2 answers



I have received an email from a hacker saying he got my email account password.
The password showed in the mail is not my account password but is a password I use sometimes.



I checked haveibeenpwned and the password don't report as leaked.



Considering :



  • This is a scam to make me pay

  • The password is a legit password I use

  • The password is not used in sensitive services (banks, socials medias, anything with credit cards information)

  • He claims to have installed a malware on my system.

What are the actions I can do? Besides changing this password on any website it is used and never use it again.










share|improve this question

















This question already has an answer here:



  • What to do about email threats containing leaked passwords?

    2 answers



I have received an email from a hacker saying he got my email account password.
The password showed in the mail is not my account password but is a password I use sometimes.



I checked haveibeenpwned and the password don't report as leaked.



Considering :



  • This is a scam to make me pay

  • The password is a legit password I use

  • The password is not used in sensitive services (banks, socials medias, anything with credit cards information)

  • He claims to have installed a malware on my system.

What are the actions I can do? Besides changing this password on any website it is used and never use it again.





This question already has an answer here:



  • What to do about email threats containing leaked passwords?

    2 answers







passwords email scam






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Jan 10 at 12:13









forest

34.6k16114120




34.6k16114120










asked Jan 10 at 8:24









Guillaume BeauvoisGuillaume Beauvois

321310




321310




marked as duplicate by Steffen Ullrich, WoJ, Rory Alsop Jan 10 at 14:05


This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.









marked as duplicate by Steffen Ullrich, WoJ, Rory Alsop Jan 10 at 14:05


This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.









  • 7





    Don't look for the password in haveibeenpwned, look for your email, this way you will see which leaked service was used.

    – Goufalite
    Jan 10 at 10:31













  • 7





    Don't look for the password in haveibeenpwned, look for your email, this way you will see which leaked service was used.

    – Goufalite
    Jan 10 at 10:31








7




7





Don't look for the password in haveibeenpwned, look for your email, this way you will see which leaked service was used.

– Goufalite
Jan 10 at 10:31






Don't look for the password in haveibeenpwned, look for your email, this way you will see which leaked service was used.

– Goufalite
Jan 10 at 10:31











2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes


















54














This is a known scam. The scammers look up emails and cracked passwords in public leaks of site databases and then send an extortion email to people. The password is already out in the open, sorry. You should change the passwords on all sites using that password. On the up-side, this does mean that the person who is emailing you is not actually a hacker and does not have any malware on your system.



You should use a password manager to prevent this from being an issue in the future.






share|improve this answer




















  • 13





    @GuillaumeBeauvois One free password manager, KeePass, is often considered the best.

    – forest
    Jan 10 at 8:40






  • 7





    @GuillaumeBeauvois The free version of Lastpass is better than KeePass. I have been using both for 3 years in my laptop and office environment.

    – I am the Most Stupid Person
    Jan 10 at 9:50






  • 5





    @IamtheMostStupidPerson There was a post here recently that hinted that LastPass may actually be handling security reports really poorly. I forget where that post is, but it's sufficient to be weary of it.

    – forest
    Jan 10 at 9:51






  • 6





    @IamtheMostStupidPerson "better" in which sense? Easier to use, for sure, but surely not safer, since one is cloud-based and the other is not.

    – Federico Poloni
    Jan 10 at 11:12






  • 2





    Just to add to that EFF also have an article on the scam

    – vlaz
    Jan 10 at 12:12


















-4














I will follow the next steps:



  1. Don't pay to the guy, and don't respond to his emails

  2. Change the password from another different machine, probably yours is infected with something.

  3. Format your computer or install an AV to verify the existence of malware or key logger or other malicious activity.

Regards






share|improve this answer


















  • 18





    This is not correct. This is a well-known and popular scam. OP's computer is not infected.

    – forest
    Jan 10 at 8:33







  • 5





    @forest At least this isn't proof of that, aside from that, one never knows for sure^^

    – Darkwing
    Jan 10 at 12:26






  • 2





    @forest Agreeing with Darkwing here; why would you state something so factually when you don't know? Sure it's a well-known and popular scam, but you don't whether OP's computer is infected with something.

    – user1717828
    Jan 10 at 12:34







  • 7





    @user1717828 Obviously there's always a chance that someone is infected with something, but it would be completely unrelated to this incident and isn't even worth bringing up.

    – forest
    Jan 10 at 12:44


















2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes








2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









54














This is a known scam. The scammers look up emails and cracked passwords in public leaks of site databases and then send an extortion email to people. The password is already out in the open, sorry. You should change the passwords on all sites using that password. On the up-side, this does mean that the person who is emailing you is not actually a hacker and does not have any malware on your system.



You should use a password manager to prevent this from being an issue in the future.






share|improve this answer




















  • 13





    @GuillaumeBeauvois One free password manager, KeePass, is often considered the best.

    – forest
    Jan 10 at 8:40






  • 7





    @GuillaumeBeauvois The free version of Lastpass is better than KeePass. I have been using both for 3 years in my laptop and office environment.

    – I am the Most Stupid Person
    Jan 10 at 9:50






  • 5





    @IamtheMostStupidPerson There was a post here recently that hinted that LastPass may actually be handling security reports really poorly. I forget where that post is, but it's sufficient to be weary of it.

    – forest
    Jan 10 at 9:51






  • 6





    @IamtheMostStupidPerson "better" in which sense? Easier to use, for sure, but surely not safer, since one is cloud-based and the other is not.

    – Federico Poloni
    Jan 10 at 11:12






  • 2





    Just to add to that EFF also have an article on the scam

    – vlaz
    Jan 10 at 12:12















54














This is a known scam. The scammers look up emails and cracked passwords in public leaks of site databases and then send an extortion email to people. The password is already out in the open, sorry. You should change the passwords on all sites using that password. On the up-side, this does mean that the person who is emailing you is not actually a hacker and does not have any malware on your system.



You should use a password manager to prevent this from being an issue in the future.






share|improve this answer




















  • 13





    @GuillaumeBeauvois One free password manager, KeePass, is often considered the best.

    – forest
    Jan 10 at 8:40






  • 7





    @GuillaumeBeauvois The free version of Lastpass is better than KeePass. I have been using both for 3 years in my laptop and office environment.

    – I am the Most Stupid Person
    Jan 10 at 9:50






  • 5





    @IamtheMostStupidPerson There was a post here recently that hinted that LastPass may actually be handling security reports really poorly. I forget where that post is, but it's sufficient to be weary of it.

    – forest
    Jan 10 at 9:51






  • 6





    @IamtheMostStupidPerson "better" in which sense? Easier to use, for sure, but surely not safer, since one is cloud-based and the other is not.

    – Federico Poloni
    Jan 10 at 11:12






  • 2





    Just to add to that EFF also have an article on the scam

    – vlaz
    Jan 10 at 12:12













54












54








54







This is a known scam. The scammers look up emails and cracked passwords in public leaks of site databases and then send an extortion email to people. The password is already out in the open, sorry. You should change the passwords on all sites using that password. On the up-side, this does mean that the person who is emailing you is not actually a hacker and does not have any malware on your system.



You should use a password manager to prevent this from being an issue in the future.






share|improve this answer















This is a known scam. The scammers look up emails and cracked passwords in public leaks of site databases and then send an extortion email to people. The password is already out in the open, sorry. You should change the passwords on all sites using that password. On the up-side, this does mean that the person who is emailing you is not actually a hacker and does not have any malware on your system.



You should use a password manager to prevent this from being an issue in the future.







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited Jan 10 at 8:41

























answered Jan 10 at 8:30









forestforest

34.6k16114120




34.6k16114120







  • 13





    @GuillaumeBeauvois One free password manager, KeePass, is often considered the best.

    – forest
    Jan 10 at 8:40






  • 7





    @GuillaumeBeauvois The free version of Lastpass is better than KeePass. I have been using both for 3 years in my laptop and office environment.

    – I am the Most Stupid Person
    Jan 10 at 9:50






  • 5





    @IamtheMostStupidPerson There was a post here recently that hinted that LastPass may actually be handling security reports really poorly. I forget where that post is, but it's sufficient to be weary of it.

    – forest
    Jan 10 at 9:51






  • 6





    @IamtheMostStupidPerson "better" in which sense? Easier to use, for sure, but surely not safer, since one is cloud-based and the other is not.

    – Federico Poloni
    Jan 10 at 11:12






  • 2





    Just to add to that EFF also have an article on the scam

    – vlaz
    Jan 10 at 12:12












  • 13





    @GuillaumeBeauvois One free password manager, KeePass, is often considered the best.

    – forest
    Jan 10 at 8:40






  • 7





    @GuillaumeBeauvois The free version of Lastpass is better than KeePass. I have been using both for 3 years in my laptop and office environment.

    – I am the Most Stupid Person
    Jan 10 at 9:50






  • 5





    @IamtheMostStupidPerson There was a post here recently that hinted that LastPass may actually be handling security reports really poorly. I forget where that post is, but it's sufficient to be weary of it.

    – forest
    Jan 10 at 9:51






  • 6





    @IamtheMostStupidPerson "better" in which sense? Easier to use, for sure, but surely not safer, since one is cloud-based and the other is not.

    – Federico Poloni
    Jan 10 at 11:12






  • 2





    Just to add to that EFF also have an article on the scam

    – vlaz
    Jan 10 at 12:12







13




13





@GuillaumeBeauvois One free password manager, KeePass, is often considered the best.

– forest
Jan 10 at 8:40





@GuillaumeBeauvois One free password manager, KeePass, is often considered the best.

– forest
Jan 10 at 8:40




7




7





@GuillaumeBeauvois The free version of Lastpass is better than KeePass. I have been using both for 3 years in my laptop and office environment.

– I am the Most Stupid Person
Jan 10 at 9:50





@GuillaumeBeauvois The free version of Lastpass is better than KeePass. I have been using both for 3 years in my laptop and office environment.

– I am the Most Stupid Person
Jan 10 at 9:50




5




5





@IamtheMostStupidPerson There was a post here recently that hinted that LastPass may actually be handling security reports really poorly. I forget where that post is, but it's sufficient to be weary of it.

– forest
Jan 10 at 9:51





@IamtheMostStupidPerson There was a post here recently that hinted that LastPass may actually be handling security reports really poorly. I forget where that post is, but it's sufficient to be weary of it.

– forest
Jan 10 at 9:51




6




6





@IamtheMostStupidPerson "better" in which sense? Easier to use, for sure, but surely not safer, since one is cloud-based and the other is not.

– Federico Poloni
Jan 10 at 11:12





@IamtheMostStupidPerson "better" in which sense? Easier to use, for sure, but surely not safer, since one is cloud-based and the other is not.

– Federico Poloni
Jan 10 at 11:12




2




2





Just to add to that EFF also have an article on the scam

– vlaz
Jan 10 at 12:12





Just to add to that EFF also have an article on the scam

– vlaz
Jan 10 at 12:12













-4














I will follow the next steps:



  1. Don't pay to the guy, and don't respond to his emails

  2. Change the password from another different machine, probably yours is infected with something.

  3. Format your computer or install an AV to verify the existence of malware or key logger or other malicious activity.

Regards






share|improve this answer


















  • 18





    This is not correct. This is a well-known and popular scam. OP's computer is not infected.

    – forest
    Jan 10 at 8:33







  • 5





    @forest At least this isn't proof of that, aside from that, one never knows for sure^^

    – Darkwing
    Jan 10 at 12:26






  • 2





    @forest Agreeing with Darkwing here; why would you state something so factually when you don't know? Sure it's a well-known and popular scam, but you don't whether OP's computer is infected with something.

    – user1717828
    Jan 10 at 12:34







  • 7





    @user1717828 Obviously there's always a chance that someone is infected with something, but it would be completely unrelated to this incident and isn't even worth bringing up.

    – forest
    Jan 10 at 12:44
















-4














I will follow the next steps:



  1. Don't pay to the guy, and don't respond to his emails

  2. Change the password from another different machine, probably yours is infected with something.

  3. Format your computer or install an AV to verify the existence of malware or key logger or other malicious activity.

Regards






share|improve this answer


















  • 18





    This is not correct. This is a well-known and popular scam. OP's computer is not infected.

    – forest
    Jan 10 at 8:33







  • 5





    @forest At least this isn't proof of that, aside from that, one never knows for sure^^

    – Darkwing
    Jan 10 at 12:26






  • 2





    @forest Agreeing with Darkwing here; why would you state something so factually when you don't know? Sure it's a well-known and popular scam, but you don't whether OP's computer is infected with something.

    – user1717828
    Jan 10 at 12:34







  • 7





    @user1717828 Obviously there's always a chance that someone is infected with something, but it would be completely unrelated to this incident and isn't even worth bringing up.

    – forest
    Jan 10 at 12:44














-4












-4








-4







I will follow the next steps:



  1. Don't pay to the guy, and don't respond to his emails

  2. Change the password from another different machine, probably yours is infected with something.

  3. Format your computer or install an AV to verify the existence of malware or key logger or other malicious activity.

Regards






share|improve this answer













I will follow the next steps:



  1. Don't pay to the guy, and don't respond to his emails

  2. Change the password from another different machine, probably yours is infected with something.

  3. Format your computer or install an AV to verify the existence of malware or key logger or other malicious activity.

Regards







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered Jan 10 at 8:32









camp0camp0

745146




745146







  • 18





    This is not correct. This is a well-known and popular scam. OP's computer is not infected.

    – forest
    Jan 10 at 8:33







  • 5





    @forest At least this isn't proof of that, aside from that, one never knows for sure^^

    – Darkwing
    Jan 10 at 12:26






  • 2





    @forest Agreeing with Darkwing here; why would you state something so factually when you don't know? Sure it's a well-known and popular scam, but you don't whether OP's computer is infected with something.

    – user1717828
    Jan 10 at 12:34







  • 7





    @user1717828 Obviously there's always a chance that someone is infected with something, but it would be completely unrelated to this incident and isn't even worth bringing up.

    – forest
    Jan 10 at 12:44













  • 18





    This is not correct. This is a well-known and popular scam. OP's computer is not infected.

    – forest
    Jan 10 at 8:33







  • 5





    @forest At least this isn't proof of that, aside from that, one never knows for sure^^

    – Darkwing
    Jan 10 at 12:26






  • 2





    @forest Agreeing with Darkwing here; why would you state something so factually when you don't know? Sure it's a well-known and popular scam, but you don't whether OP's computer is infected with something.

    – user1717828
    Jan 10 at 12:34







  • 7





    @user1717828 Obviously there's always a chance that someone is infected with something, but it would be completely unrelated to this incident and isn't even worth bringing up.

    – forest
    Jan 10 at 12:44








18




18





This is not correct. This is a well-known and popular scam. OP's computer is not infected.

– forest
Jan 10 at 8:33






This is not correct. This is a well-known and popular scam. OP's computer is not infected.

– forest
Jan 10 at 8:33





5




5





@forest At least this isn't proof of that, aside from that, one never knows for sure^^

– Darkwing
Jan 10 at 12:26





@forest At least this isn't proof of that, aside from that, one never knows for sure^^

– Darkwing
Jan 10 at 12:26




2




2





@forest Agreeing with Darkwing here; why would you state something so factually when you don't know? Sure it's a well-known and popular scam, but you don't whether OP's computer is infected with something.

– user1717828
Jan 10 at 12:34






@forest Agreeing with Darkwing here; why would you state something so factually when you don't know? Sure it's a well-known and popular scam, but you don't whether OP's computer is infected with something.

– user1717828
Jan 10 at 12:34





7




7





@user1717828 Obviously there's always a chance that someone is infected with something, but it would be completely unrelated to this incident and isn't even worth bringing up.

– forest
Jan 10 at 12:44






@user1717828 Obviously there's always a chance that someone is infected with something, but it would be completely unrelated to this incident and isn't even worth bringing up.

– forest
Jan 10 at 12:44



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