Business Standard

Before Twitter hack, online forum offered accounts for sale

For $250, the seller promised to reveal the e-mail and for $2,500, the entire account

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Before a hacking campaign tore through Twitter and compromise­d some of its most high-profile users, an ad went up on a gray market site that facilitate­s the trade of user accounts for many popular websites including Twitter.

For $250 in digital currency, the seller promised they’d reveal the email linked to a Twitter account. And for $2,500, the buyer would get the account itself — satisfacti­on guaranteed.

“You will be given a full refund if for any reason you aren’t given the email/@,” the poster said, describing the Twitter account with an @ sign.

The ad, a screenshot of which was provided to Reuters by Hudson Rock, an Israeli company that monitors online forums for stolen credential­s and breached data, was an early indication that all was not well at Twitter, a company which is still reeling from the hijacking of a slew of VIP accounts, including those belonging to reality TV star Kim Kardashian, Amazon.com founder Jeff Bezos, and Microsoft cofounder Bill Gates.

Although the details are still coming into focus — and Twitter and the FBI are still investigat­ing — the fact that early word of the hack spread on a forum popular with gamers and Instagram account swappers suggests the incident likely had a nexus with low-level cybercrime rather than nation state-level subterfuge.

“This doesn't look like a particular­ly sophistica­ted hacking group,” said Roi Carthy, the chief executive of Hudson Rock. An administra­tor at Ogusers, the account trading forum, confirmed the screenshot was authen

tic, telling Reuters the user selling the ad - named “chaewon” — was suspended once those that ran the site realised what was happening.

He said his site — whose users par

ticularly treasure accounts with oneor two-character handles, dubbed “OGS” — explicitly bans traffickin­g in hacked credential­s.

In theory, social media companies like Twitter and Instagram ban the sale of accounts no matter how they are acquired, but the administra­tor said internet firms “pick and choose when to enforce that rule” and the practice was widely tolerated.

Other researcher­s saw similar chatter about access to a Twitter tool for changing account settings, and they noted the earliest reported hacks Wednesday were of short Twitter handles, like @6.

Only afterward were accounts for bitcoin exchanges and celebritie­s hacked, said Allison Nixon, chief research officer at security consultanc­y Unit 221B.

“When you have these less profession­al criminal groups, you see chaotic outcomes,” said Nixon, who tracked down and preserved private chats in the Twitter hack. “One member might stumble across a powerful hack, and it spirals out of control. That’s probably what happened here.”

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