Fiji Sun

Briton Pleads Guilty in US to 2020 Twitter Hack

O’Connor, who was extradited from Spain, hijacked numerous Twitter accounts and sent out tweets asking followers to send bitcoin to an account, promising to double their money.

- >BBC News

ABritish national extradited to the US last month has pleaded guilty in New York to a role in one of the biggest hacks in social media history.

The July 2020 Twitter hack affected over 130 accounts including those of Barack Obama and Joe Biden.

Joseph James O’Connor, 23, known as PlugwalkJo­e, pleaded guilty to hacking charges carrying a total maximum sentence of over 70 years in prison.

The hacking was part of a largescale Bitcoin scam.

O’Connor, who was extradited from Spain, hijacked numerous Twitter accounts and sent out tweets asking followers to send bitcoin to an account, promising to double their money.

O’Connor was charged alongside three other men over the scam. US teenager Graham Ivan Clark pleaded guilty in 2021.

Nima Fazeli of Orlando, Florida, and Mason Sheppard, of Bognor Regis in the UK, were charged with federal crimes.

US Assistant Attorney-General Kenneth Polite Jr described in a statement O’Connor’s actions as “flagrant and malicious”. saying he had “harassed, threatened, and extorted his victims, causing substantia­l emotional harm”.

“Like many criminal actors, O’Connor tried to stay anonymous by using a computer to hide behind stealth accounts and aliases from outside the United States. But this plea shows that our investigat­ors and prosecutor­s will identify, locate, and bring to justice such criminals to ensure they face the consequenc­es for their crimes.” In 2020, an estimated 350 million Twitter users saw suspicious tweets from official accounts of the platform’s biggest users. Thousands fell for a scam, trusting that a crypto giveaway was real.

Cyber experts agreed that the consequenc­es of the Twitter hack could have been far worse if O’Connor and other hackers had plans more sophistica­ted than a get-rich-quick scheme.

Disinforma­tion could have been spread to affect political discourse and markets could have been moved by well-worded fake business announceme­nts for example. The hack showed how fragile Twitter’s security was at the time as the hackers managed to use social engineerin­g tricks more akin to those of con men than of highlevel cyber criminals to get access to the powerful internal control panel at the site.

It was, and still is, a hugely embarrassi­ng moment in Twitter’s troubled history.

O’Connor’s admission

was a wealth of evidence in the public domain thanks to the hackers making some bad mistakes or being too loud in their celebratio­ns in the aftermath of the hack.

O’Connor also pleaded guilty to other hacking crimes including gaining access to a high-profile TikTok

account.

He posted a video to that account where his own voice is recognisab­le and threatened to release “sensitive, personal material” related to the owner of the account to people who joined a Discord group.

The US justice department said he had also used technology to stalk a minor.

 ?? Photo: BBC News ?? The July 2020 Twitter hack affected over 130 accounts including those of Barack Obama and Joe Biden.
Photo: BBC News The July 2020 Twitter hack affected over 130 accounts including those of Barack Obama and Joe Biden.
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