Twitter CEO Dorsey’s account hacked

Twitter CEO Dorsey’s account hacked
Jack Dorsey
Updated 11 July 2016
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Twitter CEO Dorsey’s account hacked

Twitter CEO Dorsey’s account hacked

The Twitter chief executive, Jack Dorsey, had his Twitter and Vine accounts hacked, the Guardian reported.
The hacking group which posted on Dorsey’s account, OurMine Security, is the same group which has previously defaced social media accounts belonging to Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg and Google boss Sundar Pichai.
This time, OurMine released a few Vine videos through Dorsey’s account, which cross-posted to his Twitter feed.
The publicity-hungry hackers posted their standard message – that they were “testing your security” – along with the last video they posted.
As with every previous hack carried out by OurMine, Twitter itself was not the source of the compromise. This time, the hackers appeared to have gained access to Vine, and used their access there to post to the main feed. Previous weak links used by the group have included Bitly and Quora.
Of course, this time is slightly more embarrassing, given that Twitter also owns Vine. Many Vine users log in through Twitter, which allows them to protect their accounts using the app’s two-factor authentication, but older Vine users may also have a separate username and password. This could be how Dorsey’s account was compromised.
Twitter said: “We don’t comment on individual accounts for privacy and security reasons.” The company pointed the Guardian to a post from June this year on how to secure your account, but didn’t say whether the problem was Dorsey failing to follow his own company’s advice, or the advice not being enough to actually secure your account. What OurMine’s hacks lack in technical skill, they make up for in persistence, and they underscore that in technology’s connected ecosystem, any weak link can be enough to lead to an embarrassing breach.