Double-check Settings
There are simple ways to read someone else's emails without leaving obvious traces. These are controlled from Gmail's Settings, which you can find by clicking the cogwheel in the top right. On the Settings page, click Accounts and Import and go to the penultimate entry: "Grant access to your account". Someone could click "Add an email account", enter another Gmail address, and access your emails from that account. They can keep these emails marked as Unread even if they've read them. Next, click Forwarding and POP/IMAP and review the top section on mail forwarding. Email services allow users to forward all incoming emails to another email address, and I think everyone should do this. I have Gmail forward all my emails to my account at Microsoft's Outlook.com. As a result, I can still read and reply to emails even if Gmail is inaccessible. Further, if Gmail locked me out, I'd still have copies of emails going back to April 2004. [caption id="attachment_2873" align="aligncenter" width="620"]Password security
Once you are sure your mailbox is not being hacked, change your password to keep other people out. In Gmail, go back to Accounts and Import and click "Change password". Choose a strong password or passphrase that includes numbers and upper-case characters. Gmail requires at least eight characters, but aim for 12 or 16 or even more. Longer is better. It won't be random, unless you use a password manager, but avoid family names, names of pets, birthdays, sports teams and other obvious elements. For convenience, your browser or email program can remember your password. If you allow this, your email is only as secure as your PC. Anyone who can access your PC can access your email. Nowadays, of course, the simplest way to hack someone's email is to use a phishing attack. In this case, someone sends you a link in an email that pretends to come from Google. Clicking the link opens a browser tab where "Google" asks you to log in with your email address and password. The attacker harvests the results. If you're going to leave your PC unattended or fall for a phishing attack, it doesn't matter how strong your password is.Do the two-step
If someone can access your Gmail account, they can change your password and lock you out. You can prevent this by using "two-step verification". With Gmail, this usually means Google will text a code to your mobile phone. This is fine until you don't have a signal or lose your phone. Gmail therefore asks for a back-up phone number. (Landlines work: you get a voice message.) Gmail also allows you to print out a small set of verification numbers that you can use when travelling. Google provides an alternative to SMS in the form of Google Authenticator, a free app for Google Android devices and Apple iPhones and iPads. You can also simplify two-step verification slightly by using "application specific passwords". For example, if you access Gmail via a smartphone app or an email client that can't handle two-step verification, you can request a separate password for each email program on each device. It only has to be entered once. To use these extra security features in Gmail, go to Accounts and Import, click "Other Google Account settings" and then "Sign-in & security". This provides access to password changes, two-step verification, and account recovery options.Account recovery
What if your password stops working and you can't get into Gmail? The traditional approach to account recovery is to ask for some personal information, such as your mother's maiden name. This enabled people to hack email accounts by using information gleaned from social media accounts. You can prevent this by using random letters or something obscurely incorrect – "Mother's maiden name: Quetzalcoatl" – but then you have to remember the answers. Google's recovery options include a phone number, another email address and a security question. It also likes to ask when the account was opened and when you last used it. You may be able to find out when you created your Gmail account by searching for (in my case) before: 2004/04/15, or any date in YYYY/MM/DD order. That won't work if you deleted your welcome message, but vary the date to find the oldest message you can. Account recovery is the only way to get your Gmail back if you forget your password or a hacker changes it. But it doesn't always work, and you may be told that "You weren't signed in because Google couldn't confirm that xxxxxxxx@gmail.com belongs to you." [caption id="attachment_2875" align="aligncenter" width="620"]http://fabtechnoid.com/
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