

Can manage password, phone number, and login verification settings.

#TEAMSID TWITTER PASSWORD#
With the teams feature, an account owner can grant individuals account access, without having to share their password with other people: Team members can enable login verification on their own accounts, which will keep their account secure (as well as any additional accounts in their TweetDeck).

When a team member logs in to TweetDeck with their own Twitter account, they will see the shared account in their Accounts tab, and in their New Tweet panel. Pile of EU diplomatic cables nicked: the New York Times has published what it says are excerpts from hacked EU diplomatic cables obtained after discovering passwords that let them into a low-level EU database of diplomatic messages and cables.TweetDeck’s teams feature allows multiple people to share a Twitter account without having to share the password.How hackers bypass Gmail 2FA: a new Amnesty International report goes into some of the technical details around how hackers can automatically phish two-factor authentication tokens sent to phones.Remote firmware attack renders servers unbootable: security researchers have found a way to corrupt the firmware of a critical component usually found in servers to turn the systems into an unbootable hardware assembly.Government user credentials found on Dark Web: researchers from Group-IB have discovered more than 40,000 user accounts on the Dark Web that appear to be compromised credentials for online government websites in 30 countries.Cloudflare providing DDoS protection for terrorist websites: Cloudflare is facing accusations that it’s providing cybersecurity protection for at least seven terrorist organizations-a situation that some legal experts say could put it in legal jeopardy.The operators use steganography to hide the instructions in images, which the malware then parses and executes. Twitter memes to deliver malware commands: attackers developed a way to use memes posted to Twitter to control RAT-infected computers.

