You should change your Twitter password right now!!


Hy there it is your first techie MIRAN HAMID, back again with a new blog on the trending topic, the password bug of twitter.
Yes, it’s that time again — password changing time. On Thursday, Twitter revealed that a bug caused the platform to store user passwords in unmasked form. Normally, sensitive personal data like passwords would be stored in hashed form using a mix of letters and numbers to protect the content of the password itself. In this instance, it sounds like Twitter stored plain text passwords openly without any hashing on an internal log.

Twitter urged all of its 330 million+ users to immediately change their passwords after a bug caused the platform to store user passwords in plain text. Twitter’s investigation showed that there was no evidence of any breach or misuse, but the company is recommending users to change their Twitter password.

Twitter notes that it currently has “no reason to believe password information ever left Twitter’s system” or that these unprotected passwords were accessed by hackers, but the risk of the unknown remains. The company has advised users to change their passwords as a precautionary measure.
Here’s what Twitter says happened:
We mask passwords through a process called hashing using a function known as bcrypt, which replaces the actual password with a random set of numbers and letters that are stored in Twitter’s system. This allows our systems to validate your account credentials without revealing your password. This is an industry standard.
Due to a bug, passwords were written to an internal log before completing the hashing process. We found this error ourselves, removed the passwords, and are implementing plans to prevent this bug from happening again.

I have reached out to Twitter for more details on the bug and additional information about how this could have happened. Update: Twitter declined to provide additional technical details on the incident but emphasized that is believes the likelihood that the passwords were discoverable is “extremely low” and an internal investigation has revealed no indications of a breach or other misuse.
Normally, the sensitive data like passwords would be stored in the hashed form using a mix of letters and numbers to protect the content of the password itself. “Out of an abundance of caution”, Twitter is advising its users to change their Twitter password both on the site and anywhere else they may have used that password, which also includes third-party apps like Fenix, TweetDeck, and Flamingo.
It’s pretty unusual for a company of this size to make such a basic security mistake, but that’s just another reason for users to take password protection into their own hands.
According to Twitter, the bug occurred due to an issue in the hashing process that masks passwords by replacing them with a random string of characters that get stored on Twitter’s systems. But due to an error with the system, apparently, passwords were being saved in plain text to an internal log, instead of masking them with the hashing process.
Twitter hasn’t revealed how many users’ passwords may have potentially been compromised or how long the bug was exposing password before it was found and fixed. It is pretty unusual for a company of this size to make such basic security mistake, but it worth taking some time to think about how your passwords are set up.
Now is the perfect time to start using two-factor authentication and a password manager like LastPass or 1Password to keep your account credentials safe even when the platforms you use fail to do so.
That's all from your first techie for today. Hope you understood and changed your password. Until next time, Goodbye...


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