
"You have been hacked" -- I'm suspicious; who/what is "e.mozilla"?
The body of the text doesn't support the headline -- I'm unsure whether this email is genuine or phony, and I note that the sender is "e.mozilla" -- that's a new one on me.
Chosen solution
This e-mail was informing users of our newest product, Firefox Monitor, monitor.firefox.com which lets you know if your password was stolen in any data-breaches on websites you might have accounts for.
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@e.mozilla.org has been in use by Mozilla for a long time for email newsletters so nothing suspicious there.
What article is the email linking to as there is for example https://blog.mozilla.org/firefox/firefox-monitor-take-control-of-your-data/
Anything *.mozilla.org is genuine as only Mozilla has control of mozilla.org as you can see a old example list at https://wiki.mozilla.org/Over_100_domains
Modified
Chosen Solution
This e-mail was informing users of our newest product, Firefox Monitor, monitor.firefox.com which lets you know if your password was stolen in any data-breaches on websites you might have accounts for.
I see the "?" but still not reassured. Again, the "e.mozilla" is strange to me.