Twitter fell victim to a major hack that saw 130 high-profile accounts ā belonging to the likes of Elon Musk, Bill Gates, former US President Barack Obama, Jeff Bezos and Apple, amongst others ā targetted, although it’s reported that no passwords were stolen.
Hackers used these accounts to promote a bitcoin scam where users were urged to send $1000 worth of the crypto to a specific account that was listed in the tweet, they would then receive double their payment in return.

The unprecedented attack is āone of the most widespread and confounding hacks the platform has ever seenā, according toĀ The Verge.
Twitter has sinceĀ confirmed that they are working on the issueĀ and have ālocked accounts that were compromised and will restore access to the original account owner only when we are certain we can do so securelyā.
The social media platform has said that it has detected what it believes to be a coordinated social engineering attack by people who successfully targeted some of its employees with access to internal systems and tools.
Hackers used this access to take control of many highly-visible (including verified) accounts and Tweet on their behalf.Ā Twitter says that there’s no evidence that attackers accessed passwords and they donāt believe resetting your password is necessary.
US officials have called on Twitter to share more information.
Twitter Addresses Potentially Harmful Data Breach
Just last month, Twitter confirmed that sensitive data regarding their business customers may have been compromised. The company says that some clients billing information was unknowingly stored in their browserās cache, making it āpossibleā for others to access.
The data in question includes personal email addresses, phone numbers as well as the last four digits of credit card numbers.
TheĀ BBCĀ reports that non-business Twitter users will not be affected.
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