Skip to main content

Twitter confirms DMs were accessed in last week’s major hack

Twitter has revealed more information about the major hack involving a Bitcoin scam that targeted dozens of high-profile accounts on its service on Wednesday, July 15.

The company said in a tweet on Wednesday, July 22, that following a complete review of all of the impacted  Twitter accounts, it believes that “for up to 36 of the 130 targeted accounts, the attackers accessed the DM [direct message] inbox, including 1 elected official in the Netherlands.” Twitter did not name the elected official.

Although it declined to offer specific information on the other 35 accounts whose DMs were possibly accessed, it added that so far there is no evidence to suggest the hackers accessed the DMs of any other former or current elected official. In other words, Barack Obama and Joe Biden — if they use the DM function — can breathe a sigh of relief.

As for the likes of Bill Gates, Elon Musk, Jeff Bezos, and Kanye West, who were among some of the other high-profile individuals targeted in the hack, it appears at this stage that their messages could have been accessed.

The scam involved a fake tweet encouraging followers to send payments to a Bitcoin wallet. The ruse had some success, too, as data on Blockchain.com revealed that more than $115,000 via 392 transactions was sent to the Bitcoin wallet posted in the messages.

As soon as Twitter spotted the attack last week, it locked down the affected accounts and removed the fake tweets. The company said it had been the victim of “a coordinated social engineering attack by people who successfully targeted some of our employees with access to internal systems and tools.”

The hack message on Bill Gates’ account. We have removed the account number linked by the scammers. Digital Trends

Later on Wednesday, Twitter also repeated some of the findings it uncovered last week, saying the perpetrators downloaded data from eight accounts via its “Your Twitter Data” tool, adding that none of these included verified accounts.

To recap:
????130 total accounts targeted by attackers
????45 accounts had Tweets sent by attackers
????36 accounts had the DM inbox accessed
????8 accounts had an archive of “Your Twitter Data” downloaded, none of these are Verified

— Twitter Support (@TwitterSupport) July 23, 2020

Twitter said it is continuing to communicate directly with the account holders that were impacted by the hack. The FBI is also investigating the incident.

Digital Trends has asked Twitter if it can offer any additional information at this stage and we will update this article when we hear back.

Updated to include Twitter’s recap.

Editors' Recommendations

Trevor Mogg
Contributing Editor
Not so many moons ago, Trevor moved from one tea-loving island nation that drives on the left (Britain) to another (Japan)…
More than 1,000 Twitter employees reportedly have complete access to accounts
twitter and laptop hacked

The high-profile cryptocurrency scam that took place last week has underlined the broader vulnerabilities in Twitter’s infrastructure as new details about it continue to unfold. Now, a new Reuters report reveals what may have brought the social network’s security crumbling down in the first place: More than 1,000 people at the company had the ability to control everyone’s accounts.

Reuters says these employees, which also include hires from third-party contractors such as Cognizant, have access to internal tools that potentially allows them to switch sensitive user settings. More importantly, they have the option to hand this access to anyone else by sharing their credentials -- which is what reportedly led to the hack last week as per a few outlets.

Read more
Twitter confirms it may add subscriptions — but not in 2020
Twitter logo.

Twitter is considering adding a subscription service option as a new way of generating revenue for the social media platform. 

The company released its second-quarter earnings with shareholders on Thursday, July 23, and Twitter said it is exploring other forms of revenue besides advertising, which include subscriptions. Twitter noted that while something like a subscription service wouldn’t happen this year, users might see tests on the platform. 

Read more
How Coinbase stopped the Twitter Bitcoin hack from being even worse
twitter and laptop hacked

The hackers behind last week's massive Twitter security breach made off with more than $100,000 through their Bitcoin giveaway scam. But it could have been much worse.

Quick responses from Twitter and Bitcoin exchanges like Coinbase reportedly kept a combined $300,000 away from the hackers' pockets.

Read more