A Coveron user utilizing Dark web scanner to check whether they’ve been hacked.

Have I been hacked? Find out with our free dark web scan

Enter your email address to check if your personal data has been exposed in a data breach. Start with a free scan, then use Coveron for ongoing dark web monitoring.

By clicking “Scan now”, I agree to Coveron's Terms of Service and Privacy Policy.

Your data might already be on the dark web

Don’t just run a one-time free scan - get continuous protection with Coveron.

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Am I hacked?
Warning signs you should not ignore

To find out if you have been hacked, start by looking for changes in how your accounts or devices behave.

Unfamiliar password reset emails

Receiving password reset emails you didn't request may indicate someone is trying to access your email account.

Trouble signing in

If you're locked out of your email, social media, or banking account, your password might have been changed by someone else.

Security alerts about new logins

Many services notify you when a sign-in occurs from a new device or location. Treat these alerts seriously.

Unrecognized apps or pop-ups

New apps, browser extensions, or unusual pop-ups can be a sign of malicious software.

Unexplained charges or missing funds

Even small transactions you don't recognize could mean a financial account was compromised.

Friends receive unusual messages from you

If contacts report strange emails or texts, your account may have been used to send spam or phishing links.

What to do if your email is hacked

If someone breaks into your inbox, act fast and stay systematic. Start by making sure your devices are clean and then lock everything down.

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How to prevent a data breach

You can prevent breaches with a few simple, reliable habits. Protect the accounts you use every day and reduce what bad actors can steal.

Use strong, unique passwords for every account

Create a different password for every account so one leak doesn’t unlock everything else. Use a password manager that can generate long, random passwords and fill them in automatically.

Enable multi-factor authentication (MFA)

Turn on MFA so signing in requires more than a password. Set up an authenticator app on your phone for your email, bank, and social media accounts.

Keep your systems and software updated

Enable automatic updates on your phone, laptop, browser, and apps. Update fix various weaknesses criminals actively exploit.

Limit how much personal information you share online

Check what strangers can see on your social media profiles. Remove details attackers use for guessing passwords or security questions: your birthday, school names, address, and family names. Set posts to "Friends" instead of "Public" by default.

Be alert to phishing and suspicious links

Criminals use various types of phishing attacks through emails, texts, and calls to steal personal data. Check who sent the message before opening anything. If you’re asked to sign in or confirm details, skip the link and go directly to the company’s website or app instead.

Use secure Wi-Fi and protect your network

Sign in to your router’s settings and change the default admin password to something strong. Turn on WPA3 encryption if available.

Remove your personal data from search results and data brokers

Search your name online and remove phone numbers, addresses, and personal records that appear on search websites. Tools like Incogni can request removals from multiple data broker sites in one go.

Back up your most important data

Store copies of your documents and photos in two places: encrypted cloud storage and a physical external drive. Disconnect the drive after backing up so ransomware can’t reach it.

Keep watch over what you can’t see

Coveron’s dark web monitoring scans the dark web for your personal data and alerts you if it’s detected.

A person holding a smartphone while Coveron’s Dark web monitoring feature scans the dark web for leaks.

FAQ