Our Tech Team Is Faster Than Superman, But We Still Recommend You Change Your Password

You may have seen news recently about Heartbleed, a bug that affected the security of many web-based services such as Google and Yahoo. Sungevity’s team acted quickly to patch the potential vulnerability and we’ve found no signs that our data was ever compromised. Still, we recommend to all OurSungevity users that you change your password as an extra precaution.

We also encourage you to check which of your other services have been affected and change your passwords there, too. Questions or concerns? Shoot us an email at set@sungevity.com.

Here’s a step-by-step guide to changing your OurSungevity password:

1. In OurSungevity, click the gear icon next to your name in the upper right hand corner of the screen

Click the gear icon

 

 

 

 

2. Select Profile

Select Profile

 

 

 

 

 

3. Under My Profile, click the Edit button next to Password

Select Edit next to Password

 

 

 

4. Enter your new password and click Save Changes

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A Sunny Act of Kindness

Here’s a story to warm your heart. John’s retired neighbor Mary needed help keeping her electric bills under control, so he helped her go solar. Read the story in his own words. Thanks for Generating Positive, John!

Solar installers arrived at Mary's house a few days ago

Solar installers arrived at Mary’s house a few days ago

“Our neighbor Mary lives in a small house bordering our produce field. She’s retired, and lives modestly on a fixed income. Like many of us, she’s watched as utility costs have gone up year by year. A few years ago, we replaced her drafty single-pane windows. Last summer, we blew in insulation to make her attic and walls more weather-tight. And in the last few months we’ve insulated her basement ceiling to warm up her floors in winter.

All these efforts have had amazing results. Her daily electric usage has fallen a long way – by 20 percent in the last year alone. And her heating oil usage has come down by about one-third. But despite all these efforts at efficiency, electric costs just keep going up. Over the past decade, average electric charges in this country went up about 4% per year. With almost all its customers affected by back-to-back hurricanes Irene and Sandy, our local New Jersey utility – JCP&L – has repeatedly been granted rate hikes. Mary now pays 18.4 cents for every kilowatt-hour she uses.

But all that’s about to change. Just a few days ago, a work crew from Sungevity, a solar power developer, arrived to install solar panels on Mary’s south-facing roof. The system will provide 94 percent of Mary’s electric needs. She’ll be left with a monthly electric bill of about $4.00. So she can relax about ongoing spikes in utility rates…”

Read the rest on John’s blog, Beloved Planet: http://belovedplanet.com/2014/04/12/clean-solar-electricity-for-your-home/