Keep your managed Meta account secure
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There are a few things you can do to help keep your managed Meta account secure.
Protect your password
- Use a mixture of uppercase and lowercase letters, numbers and special characters when creating your password.
- Don’t include your name, email, phone number, birthday or common words (example: “password”) in your password. It should be hard to guess.
- Don’t use the same password anywhere else online. Your managed Meta account password should be unique.
- Don’t share your password with anyone, online or in person. If you do, then change your password as soon as possible.
- Remember that longer passwords can be more secure.
- Use a password manager. There are many different password managers that can securely store your password.
Never share your login information
Scammers may create fake websites that look like the managed Meta accounts login page and then encourage you to access them and enter your login details. This is a phishing scam. Here are a few tips to avoid phishing scams:
- Always check a website’s URL before you enter your login information. When in doubt, type work.meta.com into your browser to log into your managed Meta account.
- Don’t forward emails or messages from Meta to other people. These emails or messages may contain sensitive information about your accounts.
- Remember that emails about managed Meta accounts come from the domain work.meta.com.
- Don’t click any links or attachments from suspicious emails or messages.
- Don’t trust emails or messages that demand money, offer gifts or threaten to delete or ban your managed Meta account.
- Don’t respond to emails or messages that ask for your password, social security number or credit card information.
Log out of your managed Meta account when you use a computer you share with other people
Log out of your account when using shared devices to avoid other people gaining access to your account and account details.
Watch out for malicious software
Malicious software can cause damage to a computer, server or computer network. Signs of malicious software include suspicious login activity, applications taking longer to respond and pop ups and ads that appear without opening a web browser.
Use our security features
- Turn on two-factor authentication for your account, provided SSO hasn’t been enabled.