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Twitter CEO's account sent racist tweets after hack

August 31, 2019

Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey's account was hacked and sent a series of racist and offensive tweets to Dorsey's followers. The incident has raised fresh concerns about social media users' digital security.

https://p.dw.com/p/3Omdm
Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey
Image: AFP/P. Singh

Twitter said on Friday that the account of its chief executive, Jack Dorsey, had been "compromised," after the account sent a stream of erratic and offensive tweets. The messages contained racial epithets and included a retweet of a message supporting Nazi Germany.

Some of the tweets were visible for about 30 minutes before the social-networking giant deleted them. 

Read more: Top 10 mistakes that make life easy for cyber-criminals 

"We're aware that @jack was compromised and [are] investigating what happened," a Twitter spokesperson said.

The company followed up with Twitter posts saying Dorsey's account was secured, that there was "no indication that Twitter's systems have been compromised," and that Dorsey's account was "compromised due to a security oversight by the mobile provider."

The San Francisco-based firm suspended accounts that the hacker or hackers retweeted while they had control of Dorsey's account. It also suspended the account that appeared to be responsible for the hack.

Some of the tweets contained the hashtag #ChucklingSquad, which was believed to indicate the identity of the hacker group. The same calling card was left behind during recent hacks of other high-profile social media personalities.

Fresh concerns

The hack raises uncomfortable questions for Twitter, with critics pointing to the failure of the company to keep its own chief safe on the platform. It remains unclear whether Dorsey made a personal error in how he manages his own digital security.

Read more: Why you should think twice about giving Facebook your mobile number

The incident comes after Twitter and Dorsey promised to improve the "health" and civility of discourse on the social media service, cracking down on hate speech and abuse. Long criticized for allowing bad behavior to run rampant, Twitter has been trying to rein in the worst offenders, banning accounts that violate its terms and making others less visible.

This is not the first time Dorsey has been hacked. In 2016, his account was taken over by the hacker group OurMine, which also attacked other high-profile social media leaders, including the Facebook account of CEO Mark Zuckerberg.

sri/sms (AP, AFP, Reuters)

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