Two-step verification, two-factor authentication, multi-factor authenticationβ¦whatever your social media platform calls it, itβs an excellent way to protect your accounts.
Thereβs a good chance youβre already using multi-factor verification with your other accounts β for your bank, your finances, your credit card, and any number of things. The way it requires an extra one-time code in addition to your login and password makes life far tougher for hackers.
Itβs increasingly common to see nowadays, where all manner of online services only allow access to your accounts after youβve provided a one-time passcode sent to your email or smartphone. Thatβs where two-step verification comes in. You get sent a code as part of your usual login process (usually a six-digit number), and then you enter that along with your username and password.
Some online services also offer the option to use an authenticator app, which sends the code to a secure app rather than via email or your smartphone. Authenticator apps work much in the same way, yet they offer three unique features:
Google, Microsoft, and others offer authenticator apps if you want to go that route. You can get a good list of options by checking out the βeditorβs picksβ at your app store or in trusted tech publications.
Whichever form of authentication you use, always keep that secure code to yourself. Itβs yours and yours alone. Anyone who asks for that code, say someone masquerading as a customer service rep, is trying to scam you. With that code, and your username/password combo, they can get into your account.
Passwords and two-step verification work hand-in-hand to keep you safer. Yet not any old password will do. Youβll want a strong, unique password. Hereβs how that breaks down:
Now, with strong passwords in place, you can get to setting up multi-factor verification on your social media accounts.
When you set up two-factor authentication on Facebook, youβll be asked to choose one of three security methods:
And hereβs a link to the companyβs full walkthrough: https://www.facebook.com/help/148233965247823
When you set up two-factor authentication on Instagram, youβll be asked to choose one of three security methods: an authentication app, text message, or WhatsApp.
And hereβs a link to the companyβs full walkthrough: https://help.instagram.com/566810106808145
And hereβs a link to the companyβs full walkthrough: https://faq.whatsapp.com/1920866721452534
And hereβs a link to the companyβs full walkthrough: https://support.google.com/accounts/answer/185839?hl=en&co=GENIE.Platform%3DDesktop
1. TapProfileat the bottom of the screen.
2. Tap theΒ MenuΒ button at the top.
3. TapΒ Settings and Privacy, then Security.
4. TapΒ 2-step verificationΒ and choose at least two verification methods: SMS (text), email, and authenticator app.
5. TapΒ Turn on to confirm.
And hereβs a link to the companyβs full walkthrough: https://support.tiktok.com/en/account-and-privacy/personalized-ads-and-data/how-your-phone-number-is-used-on-tiktok
The post How to Protect Your Social Media Passwords with Multi-factor Verification appeared first on McAfee Blog.
A tool to find a company (target) infrastructure, files, and apps on the top cloud providers (Amazon, Google, Microsoft, DigitalOcean, Alibaba, Vultr, Linode). The outcome is useful for bug bounty hunters, red teamers, and penetration testers alike.
The complete writeup is available. here
we are always thinking of something we can automate to make black-box security testing easier. We discussed this idea of creating a multiple platform cloud brute-force hunter.mainly to find open buckets, apps, and databases hosted on the clouds and possibly app behind proxy servers.
Here is the list issues on previous approaches we tried to fix:
Microsoft: - Storage - Apps
Amazon: - Storage - Apps
Google: - Storage - Apps
DigitalOcean: - storage
Vultr: - Storage
Linode: - Storage
Alibaba: - Storage
1.0.0
Just download the latest release for your operation system and follow the usage.
To make the best use of this tool, you have to understand how to configure it correctly. When you open your downloaded version, there is a config folder, and there is a config.YAML file in there.
It looks like this
providers: ["amazon","alibaba","amazon","microsoft","digitalocean","linode","vultr","google"] # supported providers
environments: [ "test", "dev", "prod", "stage" , "staging" , "bak" ] # used for mutations
proxytype: "http" # socks5 / http
ipinfo: "" # IPINFO.io API KEY
For IPINFO API, you can register and get a free key at IPINFO, the environments used to generate URLs, such as test-keyword.target.region and test.keyword.target.region, etc.
We provided some wordlist out of the box, but it's better to customize and minimize your wordlists (based on your recon) before executing the tool.
After setting up your API key, you are ready to use CloudBrute.
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V 1.0.7
usage: CloudBrute [-h|--help] -d|--domain "<value>" -k|--keyword "<value>"
-w|--wordlist "<value>" [-c|--cloud "<value>"] [-t|--threads
<integer>] [-T|--timeout <integer>] [-p|--proxy "<value>"]
[-a|--randomagent "<value>"] [-D|--debug] [-q|--quite]
[-m|--mode "<value>"] [-o|--output "<value>"]
[-C|--configFolder "<value>"]
Awesome Cloud Enumerator
Arguments:
-h --help Print help information
-d --domain domain
-k --keyword keyword used to generator urls
-w --wordlist path to wordlist
-c --cloud force a search, check config.yaml providers list
-t --threads number of threads. Default: 80
-T --timeout timeout per request in seconds. Default: 10
-p --proxy use proxy list
-a --randomagent user agent randomization
-D --debug show debug logs. Default: false
-q --quite suppress all output. Default: false
-m --mode storage or app. Default: storage
-o --output Output file. Default: out.txt
-C --configFolder Config path. Default: config
for example
CloudBrute -d target.com -k target -m storage -t 80 -T 10 -w "./data/storage_small.txt"
please note -k keyword used to generate URLs, so if you want the full domain to be part of mutation, you have used it for both domain (-d) and keyword (-k) arguments
If a cloud provider not detected or want force searching on a specific provider, you can use -c option.
CloudBrute -d target.com -k keyword -m storage -t 80 -T 10 -w -c amazon -o target_output.txt
Read the usage.
Make sure you read the usage correctly, and if you think you found a bug open an issue.
It's because you use public proxies, use private and higher quality proxies. You can use ProxyFor to verify the good proxies with your chosen provider.
change -T (timeout) option to get best results for your run.
Inspired by every single repo listed here .
There has been an exponential increase in breaches within enterprises despite the carefully constructed and controlled perimeters that exist around applications and data. Once an attacker can access⦠Read more on Cisco Blogs
Join the guided tour outside the Security Operations Center, where weβll discuss real time network traffic of the RSA Conference, as seen in the NetWitness platform. Engineers will be using Cisco Sβ¦ Read more on Cisco Blogs
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