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Twitter is a social media platform whose accounts, APIs, and integrations can expose users to account takeover, data leaks, and abuse.

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Twitter is a public social-media platform, now operated under the X name, where users post short messages, share media, and communicate through replies and direct messages. Its security relevance comes from the volume and speed of public content, account relationships, and links exchanged there. Researchers also use it for threat intelligence, while attackers may exploit public trust and impersonation to distribute phishing pages, malware, or fraudulent information.

Material risks include account takeover through stolen credentials, session theft, or compromised third-party applications; abuse of APIs and OAuth permissions; and exposure of personal data in posts, metadata, or private communications. Security teams should verify accounts and links rather than treating platform identity as proof, restrict and review application access, protect administrator accounts with phishing-resistant multifactor authentication where available, and preserve relevant posts or messages during investigations because content and account ownership can change.

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Users of the social media platform X (Twitter) have often been left puzzled when they click on a post with an external link but arrive at an entirely unexpected website from the one displayed. A Twitter ad spotted below by a security researcher shows forbes.com as its destination but instead takes you to a Telegram account. [...]

As thousands of civilians die amid the deadly Israel-Hamas war, scammers are capitalizing on the horrific events to collect donations by pretending to be legitimate charities. BleepingComputer has come across several posts on X (formerly Twitter), Telegram and Instagram where scammers list dubious cryptocurrency wallet addresses. [...]

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