Categories: Web

Twitter hack was not an “isolated incident” & not the work of amateurs

A targeted and professional hack was perpetrated against Twitter and its users last week with many users’ details compromised and potentially stolen, the company admitted on its blog late on Friday.

Twitter reports that a quarter of a million of its users’ accounts were victims in the attack, with the hackers gaining access to usernames, email addresses, and session tokens. The company says that the hackers also got access to users’ passwords but these were encrypted, not in plain text, or were salted.

“Our investigation has thus far indicated that the attackers may have had access to limited user information – usernames, email addresses, session tokens and encrypted/salted versions of passwords”

Twitter said that the hack was not an “isolated incident” and was not the work of amateurs and that it believes that other companies have been subject to the same type of illegal access.

“This attack was not the work of amateurs, and we do not believe it was an isolated incident. The attackers were extremely sophisticated, and we believe other companies and organizations have also been recently similarly attacked. ”

Citing the New York Times’ and the Wall Street Journal’s recent attacks Twitter says this hack is part of an increasing number of professional-level attacks against US technology and media companies, although Twitter did say who it suspects was responsible.

It’s not clear if this hack was the reason for the downtime the site suffered on Thursday last week.

While this is a serious attack only a small percentage of users need to be worried. Twitter’s latest data reports that the company has 200 million monthly active users (with a greater number of inactive users).  Even if the hackers only targeted such monthly active users the total percentage of hacked accounts would come to 0.125% of active users.

The company has reset victims’ passwords and sent emails alerting them that their accounts were potentially compromised.  Twitter is also asking all users to reset their passwords and follow proper “password hygiene.”

The company recommends that users;

  • Create passwords that are at least 10 characters in length.
  • Use a combination of upper and lower case, numbers, special characters (punctuation marks).
  • Disable Java (not JavaScript) in browsers.
  • Never reuse the same password on multiple sites or multiple accounts.
  • Avoid using common passwords (e.g. 123456, password).

Twitter users who want to change their passwords can do so here.

Twitter says it is still gathering information about the hack and is working with US law enforcement agencies.

Ajit Jain

Ajit Jain is marketing and sales head at Octal Info Solution, a leading iPhone app development company and offering platform to hire Android app developers for your own app development project. He is available to connect on Google Plus, Twitter, Facebook, and LinkedIn.

Recent Posts

From the Dot-Com Bust to the Age of AI: Nisum’s 25-Year Playbook for Sustainable Success

Imtiaz Mohammady, founder and CEO of global technology consulting firm Nisum, doesn’t fit the Silicon…

2 days ago

Japan moves to build the first 1-million-qubit quantum computer through new industry partnership

The birth of quantum mechanics was accidental, as most scientific discoveries go. Working from the…

3 days ago

New partnerships accelerate digital health as AI continues to redefine orthopedics

The convergence of AI, specialized software, and clinical expertise is creating a new paradigm in…

4 days ago

Deduction Raises $2.8M To Launch “Taylor, CPAI,” an AI Agent Aiming To Fix America’s Tax Bottleneck

The IRS just confirmed that Direct File — the agency’s short-lived attempt to offer a…

4 days ago

Credentialing conference to welcome Sara Ross, sponsor Kryterion this month in Phoenix

I.C.E. Exchange, long regarded as one of the country's leading credentialing conferences, announced that its…

5 days ago

‘We must fight all attempts to undermine climate action, regardless the actor’: UN at COP30

Criticizing UN policies is now considered to be dangerous disinformation for impeding progress on Agenda…

5 days ago