Join the AMA (Ask Me Anything) with the Firefox leadership team to celebrate Firefox 20th anniversary and discuss Firefox’s future on Mozilla Connect. Mark your calendar on Thursday, November 14, 18:00 - 20:00 UTC!

Овај сајт ће имати ограничену функционалност док га будемо ажурирали у циљу побољшања вашег искуства. Ако неки чланак не реши ваш проблем и желите да поставите питање, на располагању ће вам бити наше заједнице подршке @FirefoxSupport на Twitter-у и /r/firefox на Reddit-у.

Претражи подршку

Избегните преваре подршке. Никада од вас нећемо тражити да зовете или шаљете поруке на број или да делите личне податке. Пријавите сумњиве радње преко „Пријавите злоупотребу” опције.

Сазнај више

Received email from mozilla could it be a phishing email?

more options

Hi there I receive an email which claims to be from Firefox Monitor. Address is Firefox Monitor <breach-alerts@mozilla.com>

Picture is attached

I'm not sure this is legitimate as I have tried to log on to Mozilla Support but it does not recognise my email address.

Could you investigate and feedback?

If it is legitimate can kindly provide details of course of action to be taken.

thank you

Hi there I receive an email which claims to be from Firefox Monitor. Address is '''Firefox Monitor <breach-alerts@mozilla.com>''' Picture is attached I'm not sure this is legitimate as I have tried to log on to Mozilla Support but it does not recognise my email address. Could you investigate and feedback? If it is legitimate can kindly provide details of course of action to be taken. thank you
Приложени снимци екрана

Сви одговори (1)

more options

Hi, if you signed up for Firefox Monitor, you can go directly to the site and see what is going on for your email address, you don't have to use the links in the message:

https://monitor.firefox.com/

Even if you didn't sign up, you still might be able to run a search there. Otherwise, you can run a search on the website which provides data to Mozilla for this service:

https://haveibeenpwned.com/

Regarding "what to do" if there has been a breach, it depends on what data elements were obtained. This article has suggestions: Mozilla Monitor - Frequently asked questions.


This is the information from the second link above about this breach:

During October 2021, 3.1 million email addresses with accounts on the cryptocurrency market capitalisation website CoinMarketCap were discovered being traded on hacking forums. Whilst the email addresses were found to correlate with CoinMarketCap accounts, it's unclear precisely how they were obtained. CoinMarketCap has provided the following statement on the data: "CoinMarketCap has become aware that batches of data have shown up online purporting to be a list of user accounts. While the data lists we have seen are only email addresses (no passwords), we have found a correlation with our subscriber base. We have not found any evidence of a data leak from our own servers — we are actively investigating this issue and will update our subscribers as soon as we have any new information."

You might wonder, What harm could it do to know just the email address of a customer of a website? If the email address is also the username for login, an attacker might conduct either a brute force attack, trying millions of password combinations, or might try passwords matching that email address stolen from a different website on the assumption that many people re-use passwords across different sites. If you have a strong and unique password for this site, then it doesn't sound like you need to change your password. But you could if you feel safer. If you don't have a login for that site, it's not clear why your email address would be in the data dump; probably CoinMarketCap will release more information in the future about this compromise.