Just a few days ago, Twitter sounded an alert to Twitter users that there have been attempts to phish Twitter accounts for log in IDs and passwords via Twitter’s direct message. I personally did not receive any such Twitter messages purportedly from people we know. However, a few of my friends did receive these phishing messages but they knew about this alert so were not caught.
This morning, I read that US President-elect Barack Obama’s Twitter account was also hacked, besides those of celebrities like Britney Spears.
I have wondered why hackers and phishers would want the passwords to our Twitter accounts. Apparently they know that most of us use the same password EVERY website so I guess they will attempt logging in to websites like PayPal or eBay with these user IDs and passwords that they have harvested.
So how does one know his Twitter account has been hacked, or phished? When he is not able to log into his account. To rectify this, just reset password, and a new temporary password will be sent to the email that the owner has associated with Twitter UNLESS the hacker has changed this email address with his own. If that is the case, write in to Twitter.