Twitter allows you to link third-party services and applications to your account in a range of different ways. Let’s look at how to manage and remove these apps’ posting permissions.
In some cases, fake or malicious app connectors can be used to post spam from your account, follow accounts that you wouldn’t normally, or extract some of your personal data. You can see more details about this in our “is Twitter safe” guide.
While the system’s well enough locked down to avoid the most serious potential damage, such as resetting your password, you shouldn’t give any level of access to your account to any third party that you don’t trust.
Similarly, it’s important to periodically check your connected apps for anything that doesn’t need to be there. Twitter gives you plenty of control over these apps, but the list of these is buried pretty deeply in the microblogging network’s menus.
As ever, we’d also always recommend web users invest in robust antivirus and a reliable VPN to protect their privacy on top of the measures detailed below.
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The Short Version
From a desktop browser: Open Twitter’s settings page
- Open Settings
- Select Security, then Apps
- Select Connected apps
- Select the app you wish to remove
- Repeat as needed
- See AlsoHow To Create a Twitter App with Python | DigitalOceanThe Best Twitter Apps for Different Uses (Updated August 2024)The best Twitter client for Windows: schedule and manage your tweets
Step
1Open Twitter in your browser
When logged in via a desktop browser, open your your Twitter home page, look at the menu pane on the left and click More.
Step
2Open Settings
An extra set of options with concertina out. From these, select Settings and privacy. You can also go directly to your account settings by visiting https://twitter.com/settings/account
Step
3Select Security, then Apps
From the settings screen, click Security and account access in the second pane, and then click Apps and sessions in the third pane
Step
4Select Connected apps
The third pane will change to show the Apps and sessions menu. From here, click Connected apps to view the list. You can go here directly by visiting https://twitter.com/settings/connected_apps
Step
5Select the app you wish to remove
Click on the name of any app you wish to examine or remove. The name, description, home page link, date added and permissions will be displayed. Click the red link at the bottom reading Revoke app permissions to remove its access to your account.
Step
6Repeat as needed
This will change to Report application if successful. You only need to click that if the app was added without your permission or knowledge. Otherwise, click the back arrow (←) by the app’s name to go back to list and remove any others.
Twitter apps of this kind are generally low-risk, particularly as successive changes have added further restrictions to what these apps can actually. However, it’s important to keep a regular eye on any external service with access to your accounts.
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There are even more complicated and powerful ways of linking apps to your Twitter account, but as most of these require you to register as a developer and generate an API key, it’s unlikely that you’ll add any of these without realising. Unless you know exactly what you’re doing, avoid anything that requires to you set up accounts or generate keys in the Twitter Developer portal!
Troubleshooting
I accidentally removed an app I wanted!
Don’t worry. Next time you use the service, you’ll be prompted to reconnect your Twitter account.
I don’t recognise an app. Should leave it there?
No. The odds are that you don’t use it any more, and you want to give as few things as possible access to your account.
What do I do if I think a connected app is malicious?
Revoke the app’s permissions as described above then click Report application. You’ll be taken to Twitter’s API Policy Support page, then select I need to report an API policy violation from the How can we help pull-down. Select the most appropriate option from “I would like to report a bad app” and “I’d like to report a possible API violation regarding surveillance or user privacy”, provide your email address (optionally) and any details you’d like to share about the app’s activity.
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