

It is suggesting a probability of password leak. It does not necessarily mean there already was a leak. You get this message when you have used the same password on multiple apps and/or websites. The error message read "The password for this device was compromised in a data leak and is now available online for anyone to use". I will also be contacting Onkyo tech support. I'd appreciate any suggestions people have about this. I can't find anything on the iPhone that would allow me to do this. I thought perhaps I need to run the initial setup with an iOS device again, which would entail removing the receiver as a AirPlay speaker and then add it as a new one. There is nothing in the receiver's user manual about setting up a username and password, so I can't log in and change the supposedly compromised password. It then prompted me to log into the receiver by it's network address using a username and password. The scan found all the other devices on the network (computers, phones, Apple TV, Canon printer, Synology NAS, Verizon router and a Lenovo "smart" alarm clock) to be secure. When I performed a network scan for the first time, it indicated that there was problem with the receiver.

I recently installed the free version of Avast Security, an antivrus/malware app, on my MacBook Air (2020, M1, 16GB RAM, 1TB SSD, MacOS 12.6.6). So I followed the instructions for using an iOS device and it has been working fine for the 3 years that I've owned the receiver. Non-IOS users instead have to enter via the remote control the login information for the network. Apparently this allows the receiver to get the wi-fi information it needs. When doing the inital setup it simply required registering to my iPhone SE (1st gen) as a new AirPlay speaker. I own an Onkyo stereo receiver model TX-8260 that supports wi-fi connections. I'm not sure if this is the right part of Community to ask this, but it's related to network audio devices and AirPlay.
