137

Like the title says, I’ve got yesterday an email with a code to access my Microsoft account and that made me suspicious because I wasn’t trying to login to my account. When I looked at the login attempts I saw that someone else was trying to access my account, I changed my password, activated TFA. Thinking of going through and buying a physical key like yubico to further secure my account. Any tips are appreciated.

you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
[-] kamiheku@sopuli.xyz 45 points 8 months ago

They cracked my randomly generated password - which doesn't surprise me that much, brute force cracker are pretty effective nowadays.

I'm actually surprised that it'd be feasible to use a brute force approach to gain access to an online account. I would expect them to hit some kind of rate-limiting long before they'd find the correct password

[-] scytale@lemm.ee 15 points 8 months ago* (last edited 8 months ago)

Brute force attacks are usually done offline, where the attacker somehow gets a copy of a database of hashed passwords and they can take as many attempts as they want locally before they get a hit and can try it online.

[-] Itsamelemmy@lemmy.zip 3 points 8 months ago

Looking at my history, they're hours or a day apart. Probably no chance of getting into any halfway decent password that way, but if they can automate it with thousands of different email addresses, eventually they'd get an account with a weak password and get in.

this post was submitted on 17 Feb 2024
137 points (96.6% liked)

techsupport

2455 readers
5 users here now

The Lemmy community will help you with your tech problems and questions about anything here. Do not be shy, we will try to help you.

If something works or if you find a solution to your problem let us know it will be greatly apreciated.

Rules: instance rules + stay on topic

Partnered communities:

You Should Know

Reddit

Software gore

Recommendations

founded 1 year ago
MODERATORS