Results tagged “Twitter”

One of the ideas put forward here by Dave Winer, that you should control your own identity on the Internet, is one I whole-heartedly agree with. I’ve done points 1, 4, 5 and 6 and think that I’ll do #2 soon. I’m not sure I care quite as much about #3 yet, although I agree that reputation networks built on this idea would be powerful if they caught on widely. I’ll have to give that more thought.

Certainly, it’s clear to me that when companies like Google and Facebook own the profile and data by which other people know you, you’ve ceded a good deal of control to them. I’ve been planning to move my personal data of value to my own site and only include pointers to it from other sites, and plan to continue down that path. Since I don’t live in the public eye like Winer it hasn’t seemed as important. But the more I use these social networks, the less I think that my public exposure matters.

The Twitter fail whale error message.

Image via Wikipedia

Last night, Twitter’s DNS records were maliciously changed to point at servers that Twitter does not control. If you tried to use Twitter during that time, depending on how you authenticate to Twitter, it’s possible that you sent your user name and password to those unauthorized servers. I’d recommend that you immediately change your Twitter password.

And don’t stop there. If you use that password at other sites—a practice that’s all too common—make sure to go change it at those sites too. Especially if you use the same user name. While you’re at it, take the time to use a different password at each of those locations. Use a password manager to help you remember them if it helps. I use the excellent 1password personally, and highly recommend it.

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