Twitter has given millions of users a way of making their accounts even harder to hack, with the introduction of support for physical keys.
Most Twitter users protect their accounts in the traditional way: username and password. As with any other internet account, such security is vulnerable to a number of threats including phishing or a user unwisely choosing the same password that they use elsewhere on the internet.
This is the primary reason that so many Twitter accounts have been compromised by hackers over the years.
High profile victims have included FC Barcelona, CNN, Burger King, Google CEO Sundar Pichai, Wikipedia’s Jimmy Wales, and Mark Zuckerberg.
One of the most notorious hijackings of a Twitter account occurred in 2013, when the Syrian Electronic Army managed to gain control of Associated Press’s Twitter account and posted a message saying that there had been an explosion at the White House and Barack Obama had been injured.
That bogus report knocked 61 billion dollars (briefly) off the Dow Jones Index.
If you’re sensible you have taken better steps than just a password to protect your Twitter account, and enabled two-step verification in the form of “Login Verification”.That adds an extra hurdle to the login process by asking for a code generated by a third-party app such as Google Authenticator and Authy to be be entered.
For most people, this level of protection is probably enough.
But what if you want to go even further, and wish to ensure an even high level of physical security to your Twitter account?
If that’s you then you’ll be interested to read news inside a blog post detailing Twitter’s latest steps to combat spam and abuse on the site.
Twitter has revealed that you can now use a physical USB security key which supports the universal two-factor (U2F) standard when signing in for login verification.
The small keyfobs require the logging-in user to physically press a button to confirm the identity, and because it will only work on the real Twitter website it provides a high level of protection against phishing sites.
Other websites which support FIDO U2F hardware keys – which are the same size and shape as a typical USB thumb drive – include Google, Facebook, Dropbox, GitHub, and SalesForce.