A couple of evenings ago, I sent a text message to a friend telling him that there was something wrong with Gmail. I could not access my own Gmail account and after numerous times, checked those of my family members to no avail as well. I wanted my friend to see if he could access Gmail with another internet line but he as not available, too bad.
After quite a few hours, I was able to use Gmail again and thought nothing of it. You know technology, these things happen all the time, right?
Little did I know that after the Gmail outage which happened to all Gmail accounts across the board, many Gmail users received a GTalk message with a link to a video whereby they have to log into their Gmail account to access the video.
Obviously, the video was not from Google and logging into a third party website with one’s Gmail log in details would have compromised our user ID and password, and in turn, other accounts and sensitive information that could be harvested from Gmail messages.
If you have been duped by this link to a video via GTalk yesterday, change your Gmail password pronto, and you should also do it for other websites and online properties that may share the same password.
