![]() ![]() ![]() “Whenever Google discovers a username and password exposed by another company’s data breach, we store a hashed and encrypted copy of the data on our servers with a secret key known only to Google… When you sign in to a website, Chrome will send a hashed copy of your username and password to Google encrypted with a secret key only known to Chrome. Google is checking a hashed copy of your login details against a database of compromised data and alerting you that your info has potentially been compromised. ![]() This is not a sign that the site you’re accessing has been hacked – rather, it’s a new feature in the browser that was incorporated in a December 2019 update. ![]()
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