The Twitter Domain Is Officially Being Retired. Here’s What to Do to Make Sure Your Account Doesn’t Get Locked
Users must re-enroll hardware security keys for two-factor authentication by Nov. 10 to prevent account lock due to X retiring the Twitter.com domain.
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6 Articles
The Twitter domain is officially being retired. Here’s what to do to make sure your account doesn’t get locked
It’s official: Twitter.com is about to bite the dust forever. According to a series of tweets from X’s @Safety account, posted between October 24 and October 25, the social media platform plans to finally retire the Twitter domain on November 10. Currently, searching for Twitter.com still leads directly to X, but soon, that will no longer be an option. The domain’s phase-out comes more than two years after Twitter owner Elon Musk renamed the p…
Do you log into X with a security key? Re-enroll it by Nov. 10 - or else - WorldNL Magazine
Adrian Kingsley-Hughes/ZDNETFollow ZDNET: Add us as a preferred source on Google.ZDNET's key takeawaysAny account on X that uses a security key will need to re-enroll it.You can do this through security settings on the X website or app.The move is necessary due to the retirement of the twitter.com domain.Do you use a physical security key to protect your online accounts? If so, kudos to you, as that's one of the best methods of protecting yourse…
X says passkey reset isn't about a security issue – it's to finally kill off twitter.com
Social media site dispatches crucial clarification days after curious announcement X (formerly Twitter) sparked security concerns over the weekend when it announced users must re-enroll their security keys by November 10 or face account lockouts — without initially explaining why.… This article has been indexed from The Register – Security Read the original article: X says passkey reset isn’t about a security issue – it’s to finally kill off t…
PSA: Your Twitter account might be locked in two weeks
Macworld The social media network formerly known as Twitter has announced that it is retiring the Twitter.com domain on November 10. That probably won’t mean much to most people’s day-to-day use, with one big exception: security. The X Safety account posted a message that says users who use a physical security key or virtual passkey as their two-factor authentication (2FA) method will need to re-enroll their key to continue accessing the site. …
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