You are your Facebook account.
Public or private, its contents define you in a professional,
commercial and social nature. Your photos are keepsakes, and personal
messages can be confidential exchanges. Either way, it's an identity you
want to protect.
But you probably aren't doing everything you can to secure your account. You can carry Facebook everywhere on your phone, but is it safe? Facebook Mobile leaves you more susceptible to attempted hijackings and identity theft.
Here are five ways to make sure there's more than a phone case between you and a potential intruder.
1. Lock your device.
Obvious? Maybe, but more than 30% of people don't use passwords to protect their mobile devices.
This is your first line of defense if your phone is lost or stolen. You
should always have a passcode or pattern on your phone — not only to
protect your Facebook account, but for other sensitive information, too.
Think of the work emails, important documents, banking info and more
you're leaving exposed on an unprotected phone.
If you have an iPhone and it's already locked, but you'd like to go one
step further, put a stronger passcode on your phone. Look in General
Settings > Passcode Lock. Turn off the Simple Passcode option (which
limits you to four digits) and create a longer code that suits you.
You can also set your phone to delete its data after a number of failed attempts to break the passcode.
2. Use a different password for email and Facebook accounts.
Three-quarters of web users select a single password for all their sign-in purposes, and the most common codes are often the most obvious ("123456" and "password" are favorites). A few more digits, letters or symbols can drastically increase the time it takes to crack your password. Take the time to invent multiple passwords for your accounts, especially for Facebook, which houses tons of personal info.
3. Make sure Secure Browsing is on.
Facebook has offered a secure browsing option since 2011. Without an HTTP Secure (HTTPS) connection, your data is open to sneak attacks any time you use free Wi-Fi (i.e., in a Starbucks or hotel lobby).
Facebook has offered a secure browsing option since 2011. Without an HTTP Secure (HTTPS) connection, your data is open to sneak attacks any time you use free Wi-Fi (i.e., in a Starbucks or hotel lobby).
There's one downside: HTTPS encryption can slow down your Facebook
experience, already a common complaint on mobile. Avoid unprotected
Wi-Fi and use your provider's 3G/4G service to prevent potential
breaches.
4. Enable login notifications and approvals.
To ensure your account is only accessed when and where you determine, enable this feature. Facebook will send you a notification every time your account is accessed from a new location (you'll have to provide a mobile number for texts, if you haven't yet).
After you assign names to your most-used devices, you'll get a warning
if someone enters your account on an unfamiliar computer, phone or
tablet. And if someone breaches your account, you'll receive
instructions for resetting your password and securing your account.
Similar to two-step verification, login approvals will ask you for a
special code every time you try to access your account from a new
device.
5. Use "Trusted Contacts."
This recent innovation from Facebook asks you to select a small group of reliable friends. In the event you can't access your account, and even security questions aren't helping, Facebook will send different codes to these friends. When you put them together, you can get back in.
That means you should select the friends you know you can contact
quickly. You should also choose someone who won't mind sending you a
code at the drop of a hat. This option is labor-intensive for you and
others, but it's a good last-ditch at getting into your account if it's
been compromised.
What would you recommend to safeguard your Facebook account? Let us know in the comments.
Sources :
http://abcnews.go.com/Technology/security-tips-facebook-mobile/story?id=19191345&page=2#.UZjzZG1ZD6A
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