Twitter introduces two-step verification with iOS app update

Posted:
in iPhone edited January 2014
In a point update to its native iOS app on Tuesday, Twitter brings a host of upgrades to users, including a new photo gallery view, improved search and enhanced security with two-step verification.

Twitter


Perhaps the most significant change in Twitter for iOS is what the company calls "login verification," or what has become known as two-factor verification in tech parlance. With version 5.9, users can now turn on and manage the new security setting directly from the app, an improvement over other implementations that require communication with a Web portal.

In practice, the two-step system uses an iPhone as the authentication device when logging into Twitter.com. When logging into the Web portal, a challenge is sent to Twitter's servers, which in turn sends a push notification to a user's phone. From within the Twitter app, information regarding the request, including location, time and browser type can be accessed, and the request verified.

Backup codes are also implemented in case a user doesn't have their iPhone handy. The new authentication technique is an add-on to the SMS login verification Twitter rolled out in May.

As for the app's new search functions, Twitter will now return results with included social context, a feature just introduce last week on Twitter.com. A photo gallery option is also available, doing away with the pane-by-pane swiping through a user's photo cache. This option is available by clicking on the "View more photos" button.

Finally, users can now create and manage lists in-app.

Twitter for iOS comes in at 13.0MB and is available as a free download from the App Store.

Comments

  • Reply 1 of 5
    kkqd1337kkqd1337 Posts: 424member
    but you cant have this activated on both your iPhone and iPad it seems
  • Reply 2 of 5
    drblankdrblank Posts: 3,385member
    If only Twitter, YouTube, Facebook, etc. could detect and prevent underage kids from activating an account, wouldn't that be a dream if they could do that........ Fingerprint ID technology to the rescue? we should be so lucky....

    I wish parents were smart enough to prevent their kids from getting access to certain sites and creating accounts when they aren't old enough.
  • Reply 3 of 5
    kkqd1337kkqd1337 Posts: 424member

    Quote:

    Originally Posted by drblank View Post



    If only Twitter, YouTube, Facebook, etc. could detect and prevent underage kids from activating an account, wouldn't that be a dream if they could do that........ Fingerprint ID technology to the rescue? we should be so lucky....



    I wish parents were smart enough to prevent their kids from getting access to certain sites and creating accounts when they aren't old enough.


     


    whilst i don't necessarily disagree with you, why should people under an arbitrary age be excluded from the social media society?


     


    if a PERSON is old enough to physically use and has the desire to use these sites, should they not be encouraged to do so? and do so in a responsible mature way? under parental/school mentorship?

  • Reply 4 of 5
    gazoobeegazoobee Posts: 3,754member


    Does anyone even use Twitter anymore?  Other than for the banal purpose of "following celebrities," (and those who think they are celebrities), Twitter has been "over" for a while hasn't it?

  • Reply 5 of 5
    jfc1138jfc1138 Posts: 3,090member

    Quote:

    Originally Posted by drblank View Post



    If only Twitter, YouTube, Facebook, etc. could detect and prevent underage kids from activating an account, wouldn't that be a dream if they could do that........ Fingerprint ID technology to the rescue? we should be so lucky....



    I wish parents were smart enough to prevent their kids from getting access to certain sites and creating accounts when they aren't old enough.


    A national, universal from birth, fingerprint database linked to dates of birth?


    I don't see that as being all that lucky: especially when it got hacked....

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