![]() Review security settings and ensure that no unauthorized phone number is registered with your Dropbox account. If you didn't previously have 2-step verification enabled, check that no unauthorized phone numbers were registered with your Google account here.ĭo the same with your Dropbox account. Look for unauthorized logins here and if need be, click the Sign out of all other web sessions button. ![]() Under the General tab in Gmail settings, check your signature and the Vacation Responder message just in case the crook may have turned it on and modified it to include a fake email address.Ĭheck for suspicious sessions in your Google account's Devices & activity page and end any unauthorized sessions.Ĭheck last account activity for your Gmail account by clicking on the Details link at the bottom of every Gmail page. Look for filters that delete incoming mail by pressing Ctrl+ F and searching for Delete it in the Filters page. Additionally, also disable POP and IMAP if you don't use them.Ĭheck the Accounts tab and look for any email accounts that you don't recognize as your own and delete them.Ĭheck the Filters tab and look for email filters that are forwarding incoming mail to unauthorized email accounts (press Ctrl+ F and search the Filters page for Forward to to highlight such filters) and delete them. If you re-use the affected password(s) on other websites, change those immediately as well.Įnsure that your emails aren't being forwarded to unknown parties by looking under Forwarding and POP/IMAP tab in Gmail settings. ![]() If you entered your Dropbox and/or Gmail password to 'access the shared files', change both passwords immediately. If this Symantec blog post about a phishing scam targeting Dropbox users sounds like what happened to you, I'd recommend you do the following:
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