Twitter hack: 130 accounts targeted in attack
Twitter hack: 130 accounts targeted in attack
- Published

Twitter says 130 accounts were targeted in a major cyber-attack of celebrity accounts two days ago.
However, Twitter says only a "small subset" of those 130 accounts had control seized by the attacker.
The security breach saw accounts including those of Barack Obama, Elon Musk, Kanye West and Bill Gates tweet a Bitcoin scam to millions of followers.
Twitter said it was still trying to work out if private data - which could include direct messages - was stolen.
"We're working with impacted account-owners and will continue to do so over the next several days," the company said, through its official support account.
"We are continuing to assess whether non-public data related to these accounts was compromised," it added.
The FBI is now investigating.
What happened?
On 15 July, a number of Bitcoin-related accounts began tweeting what appeared to be a simple Bitcoin scam, promising to "give back" to the community by doubling any Bitcoin sent to their address.
Then, the apparent scam spread to mainstream celebrity accounts such as Kim Kardashian West and former vice-president Joe Biden, and those of corporations Apple and Uber.
Twitter scrambled to contain the unprecedented attack, temporarily preventing all verified users - those with a blue tick on their accounts - from tweeting.
Attackers were able to bypass account security because they had somehow gained access to Twitter's own internal administration tools.
- Listen to Tech Tent: The big Twitter hack
- Twitter hack: What went wrong and why it matters
- What is Bitcoin?
However, US President Donald Trump, one of the most prominent Twitter users, was unaffected.
There has been speculation for some time that President Trump has extra protections in place after his account was deactivated by an employee on their last day of work in 2017.
The New York Times confirmed that was how Mr Trump's account escaped the attack, citing an anonymous White House official and a separate Twitter employee.
Despite the fact that the scam was obvious to some, the attackers received hundreds of transfers, worth more than $100,000 (£80,000).
What do we know about the attackers?
Bitcoin is extremely hard to trace and the three separate crypto-currency wallets that the cyber-criminals used have already been emptied.
The digital money is likely to be split into smaller amounts and run through so-called "mixer" or "tumbler" services to make it even harder to trace back to the attackers.
Bitcoin explained: How do cryptocurrencies work?
Clues about those responsible are surfacing through bragging on social media - including on Twitter itself.
Earlier this week, researchers at cyber-crime intelligence firm Hudson Rock spotted an advert on a hacker forum claiming to be able to steal any Twitter account by changing the email address to which it is linked.
The seller also posted a screenshot of the panel usually reserved for high-level Twitter employees. It appeared to allow full control of adding an email to an account or "detaching" existing ones.
This means that the attackers had access to the back end of Twitter at least 36-48 hours before the Bitcoin scams began appearing on Wednesday evening.
The researchers have also linked at least one Twitter account to the hack, which has now been suspended.
The concern is that this hack might not be over if the attackers copied - and still possess the private Direct Messages of the accounts over which they took control.
"Bitcoin scam is a misguided way to frame this incident," Roi Carthy, CEO of Hudson Rock said.
"If anything, the 'scam' part supports the conclusion that the group behind the attack was, to Twitter's luck, unsophisticated. The incident can either be characterised as an account take-over campaign for sale on the Darkweb, or a data breach to get a hold of Direct Messages for malicious purposes."
Do the hackers have DMs?
Twitter says it is still looking into "what other malicious activity they may have conducted or information they may have accessed".
The private messages of Kanye West, Kim Kardashian West and Elon Musk could be worth money on dark web forums. Selling the private messages of presidential hopeful Joe Biden or former mayor of New York Michael Bloomberg could also have political consequences.
However, the BBC has spoken to one hacker who specialises in social media account takeovers and has been part of a hacking group with one account suspected of involvement.
"Honestly, I think the hack is over because I feel this may have been a quick money grab and run situation," he said.
"If they do have the DMs, they will be extremely careful with who they sell them to, if they do, because it increases their chances of being caught by quite a bit."
Twitter hack: What went wrong and why it matters
- 16 July 2020
The Netanyahu Twitter hack that never was
- 23 July 2020
Facebook's Twitter and Instagram accounts hacked
- 8 February 2020
Twitter's Jack Dorsey has his own account hacked
- 31 August 2019
-
Eco-zealot who poured human faeces on statue of Captain Sir Tom Moore says she is 'really sad' the stunt ca utilized 'hurt and offence' and accepts it probably didn't help her ca utilize - after being spared jail Foxconn: iPhone maker hikes pay ahead of fresh model launchPrince Louis drives a digger as he joins volunteering effortsRyanair returns to profit as distantes jumpBiden-approved Special Operations strike kills peak ISIS 'operative and facilitator' and 10 other terrorists hiding in a cave in SomaliaFacebook fined €1.2bn for mishandling utilizers' dataTears of the Kingdom: Fans react to Zelda sequel launchGoogle brings AI to search as it vies with MicroconsequentlyftAsda buys petrol station grohigh EG for £2.3bnEnergy bills: What can I do if I can't afford to pay?
Next article:San Francisco judge orders police bodycam footage of Paul Pelosi assault to be released
- ·People urged to cash in unutilized energy bill shighport vouchers
- ·UK interest rates hit highest for almost 15 years
- ·Twitter hack: 130 accounts targeted in attack
- ·When is the cost of living payment and who can claim it?
- ·Police on the hunt for prime suspect in murder of former NFL player Antonio Dennard after identifying handprint on car outside Reading, Pennsylvania bar
- ·WhatsApp and other messaging apps oppose 'surveillance'
- ·Is the UK too late to beat the US in the global trade war?
- ·Train strikes: RMT members to walk out again on 2 June
- ·ISIS-inspired terrorist who killed eight with truck in NY is convicted
- ·AI scanner utilized in hundreds of US schools misses knives
- ·Why food bills aren't shrinking
- ·Asia is spending massiv to battle low birth rates
- ·FTX: Singapore state fund Temasek cuts pay after failed investment
- ·Ovo and Good Energy customers to get refunds after overcharging
- ·IMF expects UK economy to shun recession
- ·Legend of Zelda game sells 10 million copies in three days
- ·Loose Women's Denise Welch pays tribute to 'wonderful actress' Josephine Melville, 61, who played Tessa Parker in the 1980s after she died backstage at play
- ·Neuralink: Why is Elon Musk’s brain chip firm in the freshs?
- ·Children's commissioner: Pornography affecting 8
- ·Netflix expands password sharing cracklow to UK
- ·Boeing pleads NOT GUILTY in Texas court to deceiving regulators about 'issues' with 737 Max's control system that led to two plane crashes that killed 346 people
- ·Twitter plans to remove and archive inactive accounts
- ·Energy companies making 'war profits'
- ·Can you get incostlyer wideband deals with consequentlycial tariffs?
- ·Asda buys petrol station grohigh EG for £2.3bn
- ·Asda consults on cutting pay for 7,000 workers
- ·Executed Oklahoma death row inmate Benjamin Cole was given priconsequentlyn-issued 'religious meal' of vegetarian lasagna, salad, a tortilla and a fruit drink packet: Guards say he referred to himself as 'just a super-duper hyperbolic Jesus freak'
- ·Facebook fined €1.2bn for mishandling utilizers' data
- ·Elon Musk among experts urging a halt to AI training
- ·When is the cost of living payment and who can claim it?
- ·Missing Princeton University student, 20, is found dead close to campus six days after she vanished: Cops say her death 'does NOT emerge to be suspicious or criminal in nature'
- ·How nervous are investors about the US debt ceiling?
- ·Can you get incostlyer wideband deals with consequentlycial tariffs?
- ·Asia is spending massiv to battle low birth rates
- ·Steve Bannon gets FOUR MONTHS in priconsequentlyn for defying January 6 subpoena: Defiant Trump adviconsequentlyr leaves court and tears into Biden's 'illegitimate regime', Nancy Pelosi and Liz Cheney - and says November 8 will be 'judgment day'
- ·Are there 2,000 more GPs than before the pandemic?