Twitter on Thursday said it is tightening security of high-profile politicians, campaigns and journalists as a “critical preventative step” ahead of the US presidential election.

Twitter will be implementing more sophisticated systems to detect suspicious activity and ramp up defenses intended to thwart hackers from taking over accounts, according to the social media platform popular with US President Donald Trump.

“Implementing these security measures is a critical preventative step,” the tech firm’s safety team said in a blog post.

Twitter maintained that it is “focused on keeping high-profile accounts on Twitter safe and secure during the 2020 US election.”

Accounts targeted for heightened security include federal and state politicians; political parties; candidates; presidential campaigns, and journalists who cover them.

Such accounts will be required to use strong passwords, and Twitter will enable a setting that requires confirmation by email or phone number to reset passwords.

Twitter also encouraged people managing those accounts to use two-factor authentication that requires a back-up validation, for example a confirmation code sent by text message, when logging in.

The safety team said it was applying lessons learned from prior incidents.

Hackers in July took over dozens of high-profile Twitter accounts with an attack that tricked a handful of employees into giving up their credentials, according to the company.

The incident by bitcoin scammers stemmed from a “spear phishing” attack which deceived employees about the origin of the messages, Twitter said.

While that massive hack duped people out of money, it sparked concerns that legitimate accounts could be commandeered by malicious characters out to sway elections or cause conflict.

Twitter and other social media platforms are under pressure to stop being used to spread misinformation or exacerbate social division, ahead of the US presidential election in November.

– AFP

Subscribe
Notify of
0 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
You May Also Like

Malaysia’s CFM seeks public consultation on amendment to the General Consumer Code of Practice

As an industry forum established for the purpose of consumer protection in…

S’pore population “being conditioned to accept greater surveillance”, says Sudhir Thomas Vadaketh

The Singapore population is “being conditioned to accept greater surveillance”, and such…

ST quoting Edelman’s survey: 67 per cent of Singaporeans trust the Government

Quoting the 2019 Edelman Trust Barometer survey, local media, the Straits Times…

ST writes yet another misleading article about the PM Lee’s allegation of defamation against Leong Sze Hian

Leong Sze Hian, a financial consultant and well-known Singaporean blogger who has…