What to Do If You're the Victim of a Hacked Email, Facebook or Twitter Account
                            
 
     
If you've been the victim of a hacked email, Facebook or Twitter  account, you may be in for more than some simple annoyances and spam.  Hacked emails could mean that the hackers have more personal information  than you realize - including your online bills, shopping sites and  banking information. (If you haven't changed your Facebook, Twitter or  email password in a while, let this article be the stimulus you need.)
Luckily  there are a few steps you can take in order to put a stop to any  further damage, and perhaps recover your information along the way.
1.  Contact your account providers. Check your email and social media sites  for their "help" or "Contact Us" pages: they all have them. Most  providers like Google, Yahoo! and Hotmail have directions for how to  change your email password.
2. Contact your bank. If you make any  online purchases, contacting your bank should be the next step. You  should also contact your credit card companies, even if you don't use  them online. It's not difficult for hackers to find that information  once they have your banking information.
3. Contact your friends,  family and employer. If you use your personal email to keep in touch  with your loved ones or your boss, sending a quick "my email was hacked"  note may help you avoid problems later. You may also want to post a  message on your Twitter or Facebook accounts.
Remember, too, that  a hacked email isn't the end all, be all. Any online community you  belong to should be notified that your accounts are compromised. That  includes online gaming communities, employment sites like Monster.com  and LinkedIn.com, and any site where you post pictures or share ideas.  (Pinterest comes to mind.)
Changing Your Email Password - and Other Precautions
Writer  Mat Honan is famous in the hacking world. That's because when he was  wiped out by hacker, he found out that the hacker had simply asked for  the information - not stolen it. If you're lucky enough not to have  experienced being hacked, there are some steps you can take to avoid  putting yourself in danger of losing all of your information like Honan  did.
Change your email passwords - now. Learn how to change your email passwords in case you need to do it again.
Change your social networking passwords so that they're not the same as your email password.
Make sure to enable secondary precautions, like adding a secondary email account or a mobile phone number to your accounts.
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Purchase a virus protection system; it could catch potential viruses designed to grab your information off of your hard drive.
Don't save your banking information on shopping sites: the last four digits of your credit card may be all a hacker needs.
Delete  every account you're no longer using. If you're like most people, your  online life goes back at least ten years. Get rid of anything you don't  use.
Save everything on backup storage. You can invest in a  secondary hard drive or an offsite storage facility to keep your  pictures, document and music safe.
Encrypt your data so that hackers can't read it.
An  ounce of prevention goes a long way. You don't have to follow every  step listed here (although you'll be safer if you do), but taking steps  now to avoid falling victim to identity theft is always a bright idea.