Good news for Burger King: After many months of people asking for it, Twitter finally offers two-step verification for its users. “Of course, even with this new security option turned on, it’s still important for you to use a strong password and follow the rest of our advice for keeping your account secure,” the company emphasizes.
Here’s how The Onion’s Twitter account got hacked. How? Hint: That link doesn’t actually go where it says it does.
Hey shortformblog, you’re mostly wrong.
Because Twitter cannot prevent the type of attack which has caused so many brands to loose their twitter account - malware (specifically keyloggers) logs the users credentials when they log into twitter.com, which the attacker then uses to make a perfectly “legitimate” login at a later time.
How do you prevent this as a user, given that its the #1 vector of attack for these big name brand hijackings? Use a computer that you know isn’t infected with MalWare. How do you ensure that a computer doesn’t have any malware? Never connect it to the internet (or if you do connect, only use twitter.com, and not browsing or emailing).
Does this make sense for the average user? Not at all. Does it make sense for a global brand or news agency who want to avoid what happened to AP? Easily. The $1200 hypothetical laptop is far cheaper than the damage to a brand from a high publicity hijacking.
The reason that I say “mostly” is that twitter could prevent this by using Google Authenticator or some other form of two-factor authentication. This would be unneeded for a normal user, but would allow big brands to add the extra security. I suspect that Twitter is probably working on this right now, and that this announcement is just until it is deployed.
You realize these accounts are used by multiple users and organizations as large as AP use third-party apps, right? And that numerous people use that single account, right? And that social media pretty much only works because you can share links? This solution is not realistic. It’s a band-aid solution until Twitter gets its stuff together.
The problem here is that large brands have been asking for that two-factor solution for at least two years (Facebook launched it two years ago, and Google has had it for years), and now, Twitter is feeling some serious pain because they only hired someone to work on the two-factor thing within the past six months.
They can’t block such attacks because they haven’t built out their system to deal with them.
If Twitter was serious about protecting its users, it would have been working on this solution before it got to this point, especially considering the seriousness of the problems being raised and the size of the brands it was courting. But instead, they’re playing catch-up. The best solution to bad security is being proactive.
The hypothetical dedicated laptop is not the problem. The fact that the hypothetical dedicated laptop was required in the first place is the problem.
Designate one computer to use for Twitter. Don’t use this computer to read email or surf the web, to reduce the chances of malware infection.The advice Twitter is giving to media outlets to prevent hacks similar to the one that hit the AP last week. That’s right… Don’t use your $1200 computer for any other reason besides sending short messages to other people. Twitter did this to themselves by not working on the security issues two years ago.
Director = David Gordon Green; flop = The Sitter RT @huffpostent: Director defends notorious flop huff.to/15R746x
— HuffPo Spoilers (@HuffPoSpoilers) April 25, 2013
Annoyed with all the click-baiting on Huffington Post? @HuffPoSpoilers has got you covered. This is one of the more genuinely useful gimmick accounts we’ve come across; it’s been around since August but just seems to be gaining traction today (its follower count was around 1k this morning; now it’s over 5k). To their credit, the folks at Huffington Post are being good sports about it. source
Congratulations, Twitter. You finally figured out a way to silence HuffPo’s Twitter account. More info here. (BTW, if you use an old client, the links still work.)
EDIT: The links are working again on Twitter.
Some fake accounts look even better than real accounts do.Fake Twitter Followers Become Multimillion-Dollar Business - NYTimes.com (via thisistheverge)
Twitter discontinuing iPhone, Android, and desktop versions of TweetDeck
That sound you heard was the social media journalist in the other room smashing his head into his desk in the wake of this news. To be clear, “desktop” means Adobe AIR. The native clients still work.