Laremy Tunsil and the NFL now have some help.

On Thursday, K2 Intelligence, a cyber-defense services firm, announced a partnership with the NFL Players Association in the aftermath of a death hoax targeting commissioner Roger Goodell on Twitter this week.

All it took for the most recent high-profile security breach to be forgotten was a light-hearted tweet from the commissioner assuring that he was alive. But for Tunsil — the Dolphins rookie who some believe dropped in this year’s draft after a video of him smoking from a gas-mask bong was tweeted from his account shortly before the draft — and other players susceptible to such breaches, it may require more to neutralize the naiveté that 20-somethings inherently possess.

“We would want to take extra steps to make sure they’re trusting the right people,” Jordan Arnold, head of private clientele for K2, told The Post. “Misplaced trust can transform a reputation.”

Through cyber house-call services, players and their families receive in-person training on how to better secure their accounts.

Using complex passwords, putting locks on in-home WiFi and establishing a two-step authentication process so a confirmation code is needed to unlock an account are all precautions budding NFL standouts can take to make sure their careers don’t crash and burn before they start.

“We are enthusiastic to make this state-of-the-art cybersecurity solution package available to NFLPA members and their families to stay secure and to help with problems as they occur,” NFLPA Security & Operations Director Tim Christine said in a release.

But even when social-media information is perceived to be secure, it can be anything but.

Tunsil’s image was tarnished by someone he trusted, at the time he could least afford it. That tweet may have cost him millions, as he fell to the 14th overall pick after initially being considered a potential No. 1 overall pick.

“I think it’s a personal decision,” Rob Panella, who leads the NFPLA’s cyber effort for K2, told The Post regarding a player’s security preferences. “Make sure they have a third party managing their social media, someone that they vetted.”

Representatives from the company will act almost as teachers, to some extent babying players so they grasp the magnitude of posts and clicks that seemed harmless just months earlier.

Even something as basic as letting the public know where you are, and subsequently where you aren’t, can open doors for a hacker and bring a prospect’s off-field life into question.

“Do you really need to be sharing everything you’re doing in real time?” Panella said.

The NFL, professional sports’ richest league, couldn’t do anything earlier this week to prevent its official account from announcing its commissioner had died. And in the minutes following that breach, the league still couldn’t lock down its own social-media account from escalating the farce.

Sometimes, even with an entire firm now at the players’ disposal, there’s only so much that can be done.

“These people are millionaires,” Panella said, “and it makes them targets.”