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YouHim2019-05-08 12:50:36
Google
YouHim, 2019-05-08 12:50:36

Trying to hack your Google account?

For several months, notifications have occasionally come to gmail mail saying "someone tried to log into your account", "someone requested account recovery" ... At first I did not pay attention, you never know, someone made a mistake. But since notifications have become regular, one might think that someone is doing this purposefully. I will give the last 2 letters in the screenshots. This is a confirmation code in Arabic, which I did not request, and a notification about the blocking of the associated account (I am 99% sure that I did not have such an account. We will leave 1% for forgetting about it). What is it? Some kind of phishing attempt? But the addresses and signatures are Google. On the account, in addition to all registrations, a lot of things were bought, so I don’t want to lose much. Two-factor authentication is enabled. Is it enough for 100% protection, or is there something else to do?
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Boris Korobkov, 2019-05-08
@BorisKorobkov

It looks like they are trying to log in not to your account, but to the associated *615.
Therefore, you need to start with the questions "what kind of account is this" and "how did it get connected with yours." For binding, you need to click on the confirmation link in the letter. Perhaps your address was entered there by mistake, and you accidentally clicked on the confirmation link.
Since you are still responsible for the *615 account, recover the password for it and see what happens there.

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CityCat4, 2019-05-08
@CityCat4

It also seemed to me that they were trying to restore access to the associated account. Here you can:
- either untie accounts - there should be a link somewhere "this is not my account"
- or recover the password from the connected one, make sure that it is not yours and again untie it.

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