
Data Breach
Stay protected when companies lose your information—understand how criminals exploit breaches, recognize scam messages targeting breach victims, and take immediate protective actions to secure your accounts and identity.
Understanding Data Breaches
A data breach occurs when hackers steal information from organizations you trust. This stolen data—names, emails, passwords, even financial details—becomes ammunition for targeted attacks. Understanding how breaches work helps you respond effectively when your information is compromised.
Includes personal and financial data.
To craft convincing scams.
Appear personalized but aren't.
Continues months after incidents.
Emerge from single breaches.

How Criminals Exploit Breaches
Cybercriminals quickly weaponize breach data, sending millions of scam messages that reference the breach to appear legitimate. They prey on your concern about the breach, using fear and urgency to trick you into revealing even more information or clicking malicious links.
Claim to be from breached companies.
Demand immediate action.
Steal fresh credentials.
Use breach data to sound credible.
Disguised as security updates.
Immediate Actions After a Breach
Learning about a breach affecting you requires swift, organized action. These steps minimize damage and protect your accounts from criminal exploitation. Act immediately—criminals won't wait, and neither should you.
Through official company channels.
— what data was exposed?
Immediately for affected accounts.
Authentication everywhere possible.
For unauthorized activity.

Spotting Post-Breach Scams
After breaches, expect waves of scam messages. These fake communications exploit the breach news but come from criminals, not legitimate companies. Learning to spot these scams protects you from becoming a double victim—first of the breach, then of follow-up fraud.
Demands via email.
Requiring personal information.
Designed to confuse.
Threats or deadlines.
To non-official websites.

Password Emergency Response
Receiving your actual password in a scam message is terrifying but manageable. This indicates old breach data is circulating. Your response depends on whether you still use that exposed password anywhere—act fast if you do.
Change immediately everywhere.
Update all instances now.
For every account.
To track them all.


Data breaches are unfortunately common, but your response determines their impact. By understanding breach mechanics, recognizing exploitation attempts, and taking swift protective measures, you transform from vulnerable victim to informed defender. Don't wait for the next breach—strengthen your security today.
Talk to a DFCU specialist any time, day or night. We can help you report fraud, secure your accounts, and walk you through next steps.