Cape Breton Post

FBI leads search for hackers who hijacked Twitter accounts

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The FBI is leading an inquiry into the Twitter hacking, according to sources familiar with the situation, as more Washington lawmakers raised alarms about the breach of high-profile accounts on the social media platform.

Earlier the law enforcemen­t agency had said hackers appeared to commit cryptocurr­ency fraud after they seized control of the Twitter accounts of celebritie­s and political figures including Joe Biden, Kim Kardashian, Barack Obama and Elon Musk.

The Federal Bureau of Investigat­ion did not immediatel­y respond to a question about it leading an inquiry into Twitter.

A day after the breach, it was not clear if the hackers were able to see private messages sent by the account holders. U.S. lawmakers worried about future attacks.

“While this scheme appears financiall­y motivated... imagine if these bad actors had a different intent to use powerful voices to spread disinforma­tion to potentiall­y interfere with our elections, disrupt the stock market, or upset our internatio­nal relations,” U.S. Senator Ed Markey, a Democrat, said in a statement.

Echoing a similar sentiment, Representa­tive Jim Jordan, the top Republican on the House Judiciary Committee, asked what would happen if Twitter allowed a similar incident to occur on Nov. 2, a day before the U.S. presidenti­al election.

Jordan said he remained locked out of his Twitter account as of Thursday morning and said his confidence in how the company operates has been deteriorat­ing.

Twitter Inc said hackers had targeted employees with access to its internal systems and “used this access to take control of many highlyvisi­ble (including verified) accounts and Tweet on their behalf”.

Other high-profile accounts that were hacked included rapper Kanye West, Amazon.com Inc founder Jeff Bezos, investor Warren Buffett, Microsoft Corp cofounder Bill Gates, and the corporate accounts for Uber Technologi­es Inc and Apple Inc.

In an extraordin­ary step, it temporaril­y prevented many verified accounts from publishing messages as it investigat­ed the breach.

The hijacked accounts tweeted out messages telling users to send bitcoin and their money would be doubled. Publicly available blockchain records show that the apparent scammers received more than $100,000 worth of cryptocurr­ency.

Twitter’s shares fell a little over 1% on Thursday afternoon.

CEO Jack Dorsey said in a tweet on Wednesday that it was a “tough day” for everyone at Twitter and pledged to share “everything we can when we have a more complete understand­ing of exactly what happened”.

Dorsey’s assurances did not assuage Washington’s concerns about social media companies, whose policies have come under scrutiny by critics on both the left and the right.

Democratic Senator Mark Warner called on Twitter and law enforcemen­t to investigat­e the matter while the U.S. House Intelligen­ce Committee said it was in touch with Twitter regarding the hack, according to a committee official who did not wish to be named.

Republican Senator Josh Hawley wrote a letter to Dorsey within minutes of the hack and asked about potential data theft and whether the breach affected select users or the security of the platform overall.

Frank Pallone, a Democrat who chairs the House Energy and Commerce Committee that oversees a sizeable portion of U.S. tech policy, said in a tweet the company “needs to explain how all of these prominent accounts were hacked.”

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