![]() ![]() Twitter portrayed its rather unorthodox decision to bundle a basic security feature with its paid subscription as a way… to improve user security. Instead, non-paying users are encouraged to switch to alternative 2FA methods that are free (at least for now): an authentication app and a security key. Twitter has announced that from 20 March, the popular 2FA method will be disabled for non-Twitter Blue subscribers, removing an extra layer of protection for their accounts. Twitter users with multi-factor authentication will soon have to pay for a subscription to continue receiving verification codes via SMS. ![]() Twitter makes the most common 2FA option a paid service In this edition of AdGuard’s digest: Twitter makes 2FA through SMS part of its paid subscription, Apple TV may add an ad-supported plan, OpenAI promises to stop using customer data to train AI, AI-generated image copyright claim fails in the US as LastPass spills all the beans about its latest breach. ![]()
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