Spammers and Phishing and Bots… Oh My !!!
On Twitter there have been a number of folk who have been bewildered by their account suddenly spewing spam and apparently being hacked.
There are hackers out there who will, through “brute force” hack into an account. These hackers usually attack people like Ashton Kutcher, Eric Stonestreet, and other high profile celebs.
For those of us not having to dodge papparazzi, tabloid reporters and entertainment television, we just have to take a few simple precautions, and be aware of a few steps and take a few precautions, in order to prevent MOST problems.
First thing, before anything else, follow @TwitterSupport twitter account, so that you receive updates and suggestions from Twitter, on best practices and account security.
On Twitter, when you discover a spammer, phisher or a bot… you can block them, report them, or both. (Because different Twitter interfaces have different instructions, you’ll have to learn “how” on your own.)
1) If you find you are mentioned in an @ message, from someone you don’t follow, with the enticement of a free IKEA Gift Certificate/Starbucks Card/IPad2/iPhone/whatever… Don’t click on it. Just report the sender for spam, and block them.
2) If you get a DM (direct message) from a legitimate follower, who says to you: “Have you seen this bad blog/post/picture that mentions you ?” and a link… Don’t click on it. It will cause your account to be hacked. To address this… first, note the twitter handle of the person sending the message… then, delete the message… and finally, send that person an @ message, telling them their account has been hacked, their password was compromised, and they need to change their password. A good rule of thumb is: Unless someone sends you an @ message, telling you they are sending a DM message, NEVER CLICK ON A LINK IN A DM !!!
3) If you get a new follower who has few or no followers, often with a suggestive photo of a woman, often with a nonsensical user name (Michelle9f75n00()(), and often having a bio that says something like: “My parents don’t know I’ve had sex, but I like it a lot. Please follow me” and a link. Don’t click on the link… just block and report the account for spam.
By following these few precautions, hopefully folks can use Twitter with less problems, and without the frustration and embarrassment of having to let everyone know their account has been hacked.
See you on Twitter !!!
Thanks for doing this Bob, if you have been around a little while you know all of this. I am really surprised how many people don’t know, you really see it when there is a new flurry of DM spam. I had a lady really angry with me when one of my accounts got hacked and she clicked through and her account started sending spam.
The keyword spambots are my personal pet peeve, I use the hashtag #splick for the sound they make in my head when I whack them (block and report). Thanks for educating, this crap only works when people fall for it.