Houston Chronicle

U.S.: Saudis paid Twitter workers to spy on users

- By Daisy Nguyen

SAN FRANCISCO — The Saudi government recruited two Twitter employees to get personal account informatio­n of their critics, prosecutor­s said Wednesday.

A complaint unsealed in U.S. District Court in San Francisco detailed a coordinate­d effort by Saudi government officials to recruit employees at the social media giant to look up the private data of thousands of Twitter accounts.

The accounts included those of a journalist with more than 1 million followers and other prominent government critics.

It also alleged that the employees — whose jobs did not require access to Twitter users’ private informatio­n — were rewarded with a designer watch and tens of thousands of dollars funneled into secret bank accounts. They were charged with acting as agents of Saudi Arabia without registerin­g with the U.S. government.

Ahmad Abouammo, who left his job as the media partnershi­p manager responsibl­e for Twitter’s Middle East region in 2015, was also charged with falsifying documents and making false statements when questioned by FBI agents.

That same year, investigat­ors alleged that a Saudi working as a social media adviser for the Saudi royal family, recruited Twitter engineer Ali Alzabarah by flying him to Washington, D.C., for a meeting with a member of the family.

“Within one week of returning to San Francisco, Alzabarah began to access without authorizat­ion private data of Twitter users en masse,” the complaint said.

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