What would you do if your email account got hacked into?

On Monday, I was contacted by one of our church members whose gmail account had been hacked into. Whoever had hacked into her account had changed the password, set up two-step security and changed the backup email address as well as the backup phone number. Then, that hacker had sent an email to all her contacts asking for money. The sister was in distress and didn’t know what to do.

She’d already followed the steps suggested by Google to try to recover her account. There wasn’t much I could do. I helped her set up a new email and explained that it was unlikely that she would recover her old mail box and contacts. But who knows? Google might do something. In the meantime, it was urgent to change all her passwords on the sites where she used the same one. I was hoping the hacker hadn’t already done that for her. As I left, she noticed that it was like having someone breaking into your home. The hacker had access to all her emails and part of her personal life. It was distressing, hurtful.

We often dismiss the possibility of our accounts being hacked into until it happens to us or someone we know. What would you do if your email account got hacked into? You probably store many passwords in your archive. A lot of personal information is in it. The hacker could probably make a lot of damage (and possibly profit), before you even notice it.

On my part, I am reviewing my online security steps. I am setting up two-step identification wherever I can as soon as possible. It’s a pain, but I am sure it is worth it. I will also review the sites where I’ve used the same password and change these. The following article should get you started: How secure are you online: the checklist — Lifehacker. have you thought of the possibility of your email account being hacked into? Think about it. I am sure you are keeping passwords, confidential prayer letters, details from christian friends working in closed countries…. What would happen if someone hacked into your email account?

 

A New mobile phone

We often complain about our phone carriers, or Internet provider, but never say that we rae happy about the service we get. Well, today I am pleased with them (although I know it may not last).

I got an Android phone back in January. It worked well until not long ago. Then, the screen froze, and there was no way to stop it, but to take the battery off. After that, the screen froze each time I restarted it, just before the screen that asked for my PIN. There was nothing I could do. I finally phoned the customer service, and they exchanged my old phone against a brand new one. Continue reading “A New mobile phone”

Amusing ourselves to death

[amazon_link id=”014303653X” target=”_blank” container=”” container_class=”” ]”Amusing ourselves to death”[/amazon_link] is the title of a book by Neil Postman, an American author and media critic. I had seen this book mentioned on Tim Challies’ Blog a while ago and was happily surprised to find the French translation a few weeks ago. It is fascinating reading.

Postman shows how television has transformed American culture. What used to be a society based on the printed book where everybody read (from the farmer to the intellectual), and was able to think has become a society where entertainment has become the norm. Although the book was first published in the eighties, it is still very relevant. His chapter on TV evangelists gives much food for thought to preachers of the word. If you can find a copy, read it. Postman died a few years ago, but I wonder what he would have said of today’s world of twitter and facebook.

How (And How Not) To Use Facebook for Ministry | Challies Dot Com

Tim Challies of Challies.com has written a thought provoking article on Using facebook for ministry. He says: “Facebook. In so many areas of life it’s no longer an if, no longer an option.” It is a must read: How (And How Not) To Use Facebook for Ministry | Challies Dot Com.