Active Sessions
Speako keeps track of devices and browsers where you're currently signed in. If you share a device, log in from an unfamiliar device, or suspect unauthorised access, you can review and manage your active sessions.
Where to find it
Your active sessions are managed through your profile and the underlying authentication system. Go to Dashboard → Settings → Profile (Account Settings).
What an active session is
Each time you log in to Speako on a new browser or device, a session is created. Sessions persist until you sign out or the session expires.
If you've logged in on:
- Your work laptop
- Your mobile phone
- A colleague's computer
…you may have three active sessions simultaneously.
Signing out
To sign out of the current device, use the sign out option in the account menu (typically in the top navigation). This ends the session on the device you're currently using.
If you suspect unauthorised access
If you think someone else may have access to your account:
- Change your password immediately — see Changing Your Password.
- Sign out of all devices — after changing your password, any session using the old credentials will be invalidated.
- Review team members — check whether any unexpected team members have been added to your business account (Settings → Team Members).
- Contact Speako support if you see any unexpected changes to bookings, AI settings, or business details.
Preventing unwanted sessions
- Don't sign in on shared or public computers if avoidable.
- If you do, sign out when finished.
- Avoid clicking "remember me" on devices you don't own.
⚠️ Important: Sessions on mobile devices can persist for extended periods. If you've handed an old phone to someone else, or if a device has been stolen, treat that as a potential security event — change your password to invalidate the outstanding session.
💡 Tip: Linking your Google account (with two-factor authentication enabled on Google) provides an additional layer of protection. Even if someone knows your Speako password, they'd also need to pass Google's sign-in process.