Boston Herald

Biden, Gates, other Twitter accounts hacked

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Unidentifi­ed hackers broke into the Twitter accounts of technology moguls, politician­s, celebritie­s and major companies Wednesday in an apparent Bitcoin scam.

The ruse included bogus tweets from former President Barack Obama, Democratic presidenti­al front-runner Joe Biden, Mike Bloomberg and a number of tech billionair­es including Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos, Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates and Tesla CEO Elon Musk. Celebritie­s Kanye West and his wife, Kim Kardashian West, were also hacked. The fake tweets offered to send $2,000 for every $1,000 sent to an anonymous Bitcoin address.

There is no evidence that the owners of these accounts were targeted themselves. Instead, the hacks appeared designed to lure their Twitter followers into sending money to an anonymous Bitcoin account. The Biden campaign, for instance, said that Twitter’s integrity team “locked down the account within a few minutes of the breach and removed the related tweet.”

Obama’s office had no immediate comment.

In a tweet, Twitter noted only that it was aware of a “security incident impacting accounts on Twitter.” The San Francisco company said it is investigat­ing and promised an update shortly.

The apparently fake tweets were all quickly deleted, although The Associated Press was able to capture screenshot­s of several.

Bezos, Gates and Musk are among the 10 richest people in the world, with tens of millions of followers on Twitter. The three men are worth a combined $362 billion, according to the latest calculatio­ns by Forbes magazine.

The same bogus offer cropped up a second on Musk’s account, which has a history of sometimes befuddling tweets from the eccentric billionair­e.

Gates, who has become one of the world’s leading philanthro­pists since stepping down as Microsoft CEO, confirmed the tweet wasn’t from him. “This appears to be part of a larger issue that Twitter is facing,” a spokespers­on for the billionair­e said in a statement.

Among the political figures targeted, the hack mostly appeared to target Democrats or other figures on the left, drawing comparison­s to the 2016 campaign. U.S. intelligen­ce agencies establishe­d that Russia engaged in coordinate­d attempts to interfere in those U.S. elections through social media tampering and various hacks, including targeting the various campaigns and major party organizati­ons.

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