In 2020,random sex video chat Twitter accounts for Barack Obama, Joe Biden, and others were compromised in a major hack. After the accounts of the former and current president — as well as public figures like Elon Musk and Bill Gates — were breached, hackers sent tweets hawking a cryptocurrency scam.
Now, fast forward to Friday, and one of the hackers, Joseph James O'Connor, has been sentenced to five years in prison for cybercrimes, the BBC reports. O'Connor must forfeit at least $794,000 to the victims of his crimes, as well.
SEE ALSO: Twitter API changes crush @PossumEveryHour and other good botsThe 24-year-old UK citizen, known as PlugwalkJoe online, was extradited from Spain to the U.S. in April. In May, O'Connor pleaded guilty to four counts of computer hacking, wire fraud, and cyberstalking, according to Tech Crunch.
O'Connor and fellow hackers used social engineering tactics on Twitter employees to gain access to its network. According to an investigation by New York's Department of Financial Services, they called Twitter workers and claimed to be the IT department.
Graham Ivan Clark, another hacker known as Kirk, used that access to hijack and reassign Twitter accounts, Tech Crunch reported. Basically, the hackers had access to any Twitter account they wanted. (Clark pleaded guilty to fraud charges in 2021, and was sentenced to three years in prison.) The hackers stole around $120,000.
Twitter responded at the time by temporarily preventing anyone from tweeting and resetting passwords:
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
Following the attack, Twitter said it improved cybersecurity controls.
O'Connor called his crimes "stupid and pointless" in court, according to Tech Crunch, and apologized to his victims. U.S. Assistant Attorney-General Kenneth Polite Jr. told BBC in a statement that O'Connor's actions were "flagrant and malicious" and that he "harassed, threatened and extorted his victims, causing substantial emotional harm."
Topics X/Twitter
(Editor: {typename type="name"/})
The Year in Tech: 2014 Top Stories
OMG the best thing Apple unveiled at WWDC is a $29 Apple Pencil case
Why the Finals aren't the most important story in the NBA this week
iOS 11 could finally bring drag and drop to our iPhones
Blockchain Explained: How It Works, Who Cares and What Its Future May Hold
Corporate recruitment event is a real
The 1 thing that may kill Apple's new HomePod
In the gig economy, I'm a doer. And you can be one too
New 'browser syncjacking' cyberattack lets hackers take over your computer via Chrome
In the gig economy, I'm a doer. And you can be one too
How to Get Your Significant Other Into Gaming
Oculus founder working on surveillance tech startup to help guard Trump's border wall
接受PR>=1、BR>=1,流量相当,内容相关类链接。