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- Bahasa Indonesia
- Čeština (Česká republika)
- Eesti
- Dansk (Danmark)
- Deutsch
- Español (España)
- Español (México)
- Français
- Italiano
- Latviešu
- Lietuvių
- Magyar (Magyarország)
- Nederlands (Nederland)
- Norsk, bokmål (Norge)
- Polski (Polska)
- Português (Brasil)
- Português (Portugal)
- Română (România)
- Srpski
- Suomi (Suomi)
- Svenska (Sverige)
- Türkçe (Türkiye)
- Ελληνικά (Ελλάδα)
- Български
- Русский
- Українська
- العربية (الإمارات العربية المتحدة)
- Tiếng Việt (Việt Nam)
- ไทย (ไทย)
- 한국어 (대한민국)
- 日本語(日本)
- 简体中文
- 繁體中文
- 繁體中文(香港)
- 繁體中文(台灣)
Contents
Data Leak Checker
If you are not sure whether your accounts on certain websites are safe, you can check them using the Kaspersky application. The application can detect if your accounts have been compromised and your data is in danger of being publicly accessible.
Note: The Kaspersky application can only check accounts that use an email address as the user name. When Data Leak Checker is used, Kaspersky does not receive data in an openly-accessible format, and does not store it. The data is only used for scanning. On detecting a leak, the application does not gain access to the user data itself, but only provides information about categories of data that may be publicly accessible.
By default, the Kaspersky application tries to check your user accounts when you are authorized on a particular website.
If the check discovers that your data could have ended up in the public domain, the application will notify you and display the following information:
- A list of websites from which a data leak could have occurred.
- The date of possible leakage.
- The category of data that may be publicly accessible.
You can learn how to minimize the consequences of a possible leak of this data by clicking a data category.
Check if your account has been compromised
- On the sidebar of the main application window, click Data Leak Checker.
The Data Leak Checker window opens.
- Enter your email address in the Enter email address field.
- Click Check.
If your account has been compromised, the Kaspersky application displays the list of websites where your account was exposed. For each website, the application displays categories of data that are in danger of being publicly accessible, and the date of the possible leak.
In Kaspersky Plus and Premium, the application can check your email address each time you sign in to your account on websites.
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