Twitter CEO and co-founder Jack Dorsey's was hacked Friday, demonstrating the potential vulnerabilities of even the most high-profile social media s. 6y3mk
Starting Friday afternoon, Dorsey's @jack began unleashing a stream of more than a dozen tweets and retweets, including obscenities, shout-outs, threats and racial slurs. The tweets remained on the , which has 4.2 million followers, for less than an hour before Twitter removed them.
"Intel is there's a bomb at Twitter HQ," read one of the tweets. "Shoutout to Ron and Kyle," another said. Many of the tweets were tagged with #ChucklingHella.
The company said in a tweet Friday evening that the phone number associated with Dorsey's "was compromised due to a security oversight by the mobile provider." The hacker was then able to use the phone number to compose and send tweets via text message using the platform's tweet-via-SMS feature.
Twitter said the issue has been resolved, and that there is no indication their systems were compromised.
In a statement, a Twitter spokeswoman added that the company looked into the bomb threat and "can confirm it was not credible." The s mentioned by the hacker while controlling @jack appeared to be suspended Friday afternoon
Dorsey's was previously compromised in 2016 by the hacking group OurMine. On Friday, some Twitter s said that it appeared Dorsey's was hacked via a third-party with access to his .
The event raises questions about vulnerability of even high-profile s at one of the largest social media companies in the world. Dorsey's -like other high-profile s - should have been shielded as an obvious target. Political leaders, including President Donald Trump, use the platform to share news and opinions. If compromised, a hacker could use them to make political claims or even try to start a war.
It was also unclear why the tweets - which violated numerous rules with offensive language and even a pro-Nazi retweet - stayed up so long. Twitter has previously boasted about tools to catch policy-violating content quickly.
The hack also comes at a time when social media companies are under intense public pressure to implement more effective content-monitoring procedures. The platforms have struggled to balance policing extremism and hate speech - like the content posted by Dorsey's hacked - with creating a forum for free expression.
In June, Twitter announced it would begin labeling rule-breaking tweets from national political figures, including President Donald Trump, with a message that says: "The Twitter Rules about abusive behavior apply to this Tweet. However, Twitter has determined that it may be in the public's interest for the Tweet to remain available."
On Friday, several Twitter s noted with irony that the hacked @jack was tweeting slurs and threats while this message remained pinned to his profile: "We're committing Twitter to help increase the collective health, openness, and civility of public conversation, and to hold ourselves publicly able towards progress."
© The Washington Post 2019
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