Yesterday, 12:20 PM
If your Gmail got hacked tomorrow, you could lose access to your:
- Bank logins
- Social accounts
- Business tools
- Cloud files
- Password resets
Your email is the master key to your life.
Here's the 30-minute setup that prevents this ↓
Step 1: Turn on 2FA
Go to:
Google Account → Security → 2-Step Verification
Use an authenticator app or passkey.
Do NOT rely only on SMS.
SIM swaps are real, and phone numbers are weak security.
Step 2: Add a passkey
Passkeys are one of the best upgrades you can make.
They use your device + biometrics instead of a password.
No code to steal.
No phishing link to trick you.
No “enter your 6-digit code” scam.
3: Generate backup codes
Go to:
Google Account → Security → Backup codes
Download or print them.
Store them somewhere offline.
Not in Gmail.
Not in Google Drive.
Not in screenshots.
If you lose your phone, these save you.
4: Check recovery email + phone
Go to:
Google Account → Security → Ways we can verify it’s you
Make sure your recovery email and phone are yours.
Old number? Remove it.
Old work email? Remove it.
Ex’s email? Definitely remove it.
Step 5: Review logged-in devices
Go to:
Google Account → Security → Your devices
Sign out of anything you don’t recognize.
Old laptop?
Shared computer?
Phone you sold 2 years ago?
Remove it.
Step 6: Check third-party app access
Go to:
Google Account → Security → Third-party apps with account access
Remove anything you don’t use.
Random AI tools.
Old Chrome extensions.
Dead SaaS apps.
Sketchy PDF converters.
Kill them.
Step 7: Lock down forwarding
In Gmail:
Settings → See all settings → Forwarding and POP/IMAP
Hackers love email forwarding.
They break in once, set up auto-forwarding, then quietly read your emails forever.
Check it manually.
Step 8: Check filters
In Gmail:
Settings → Filters and Blocked Addresses
Look for rules that:
- Auto-delete emails
- Forward security alerts
- Archive bank emails
- Hide password reset messages
This is how attackers stay invisible.
Step 9: Use a password manager
Your Gmail password should be:
- Unique
- Long
- Random
- Never reused anywhere else
If your Gmail password is also your Netflix password, fix that today.
Step 10: Create a separate “recovery email”
Use a separate email only for account recovery.
Not newsletters.
Not shopping.
Not social media.
Not public signups.
Just recovery.
Boring = secure.
- Bank logins
- Social accounts
- Business tools
- Cloud files
- Password resets
Your email is the master key to your life.
Here's the 30-minute setup that prevents this ↓
Step 1: Turn on 2FA
Go to:
Google Account → Security → 2-Step Verification
Use an authenticator app or passkey.
Do NOT rely only on SMS.
SIM swaps are real, and phone numbers are weak security.
Step 2: Add a passkey
Passkeys are one of the best upgrades you can make.
They use your device + biometrics instead of a password.
No code to steal.
No phishing link to trick you.
No “enter your 6-digit code” scam.
3: Generate backup codes
Go to:
Google Account → Security → Backup codes
Download or print them.
Store them somewhere offline.
Not in Gmail.
Not in Google Drive.
Not in screenshots.
If you lose your phone, these save you.
4: Check recovery email + phone
Go to:
Google Account → Security → Ways we can verify it’s you
Make sure your recovery email and phone are yours.
Old number? Remove it.
Old work email? Remove it.
Ex’s email? Definitely remove it.
Step 5: Review logged-in devices
Go to:
Google Account → Security → Your devices
Sign out of anything you don’t recognize.
Old laptop?
Shared computer?
Phone you sold 2 years ago?
Remove it.
Step 6: Check third-party app access
Go to:
Google Account → Security → Third-party apps with account access
Remove anything you don’t use.
Random AI tools.
Old Chrome extensions.
Dead SaaS apps.
Sketchy PDF converters.
Kill them.
Step 7: Lock down forwarding
In Gmail:
Settings → See all settings → Forwarding and POP/IMAP
Hackers love email forwarding.
They break in once, set up auto-forwarding, then quietly read your emails forever.
Check it manually.
Step 8: Check filters
In Gmail:
Settings → Filters and Blocked Addresses
Look for rules that:
- Auto-delete emails
- Forward security alerts
- Archive bank emails
- Hide password reset messages
This is how attackers stay invisible.
Step 9: Use a password manager
Your Gmail password should be:
- Unique
- Long
- Random
- Never reused anywhere else
If your Gmail password is also your Netflix password, fix that today.
Step 10: Create a separate “recovery email”
Use a separate email only for account recovery.
Not newsletters.
Not shopping.
Not social media.
Not public signups.
Just recovery.
Boring = secure.
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