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Hacker: I broke into Twitter

A French hacker posts 13 screenshots of a Twitter product manager's admin interface to prove the claim
By Robert McMillan, IDG News Service
April 30, 2009 04:10 PM ET
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For the second time this year, a hacker has gained administrative access to a Twitter employee's account.

Slideshow: Top 12 Twitter tools

On Wednesday, an anonymous hacker going by the name of Hacker Croll posted 13 screenshots to a French online discussion forum, apparently captured while logged into the Twitter account of Jason Goldman, a director of product management with Twitter.

Twitter CEO Biz Stone confirmed the breach in a blog post Thursday afternoon. "This week, unauthorized access to Twitter was gained by an outside party," he wrote. "Our initial security reviews and investigations indicate that no account information was altered or removed in any way. However, we discovered that 10 individual accounts were viewed during this unauthorized access."

According to the screenshots, Hacker Croll was able to access account information belonging to high-profile Twitter users such as Britney Spears and Ashton Kutcher. He could also do things such as add or remove featured users, who are suggested to new Twitter members when they sign up.

The hacker may have been able to access information such as e-mail addresses, mobile-phone numbers and a list of the accounts blocked by these users, Stone wrote. "We have personally contacted Twitter users whose accounts were compromised via this unauthorized access," he said.

Hacker Croll claimed to have accessed Goldman's Twitter password by first gaining access to his Yahoo account. "One of the admins has a yahoo account, i've reset the password by answering to the secret question. Then, in the mailbox, i have found her [sic] twitter password," Hacker Croll said Wednesday in a posting to an online discussion forum. "I've used social engineering only, no exploit, no xss vulnerability, no backdoor, np sql injection."

On Monday, Goldman sent a Twitter message saying that his Yahoo mail account had been hacked.

Twitter has had a rash of security problems this year.

In January, another hacker going by the name of GMZ said he was able to gain access to an administrative account by guessing the password of a Twitter support staffer, according to a Wired report. The password was reportedly an easy-to-guess word: happiness.

GMZ then used that access to take control of 33 high-profile accounts, including those for Spears, U.S. President Barack Obama and Fox News.

Twitter has also been hit with several fast-spreading worm attacks this year that preyed on Web programming flaws on the site.

Although Stone promised a "full security review of all access points to Twitter" after the January incident, the site's security is "very weak," according to Manuel Dorne, the French blogger and IT project manager who first published news of the most recent Twitter hack.

Stone made a similar promise this time around too. "Twitter takes security very seriously so we will be conducting a thorough, independent security audit of all internal systems and implementing additional anti-intrusion measures to further safeguard user data," he wrote Thursday.

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Comments (8)
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Forgot your account info?

TwitterBy Hacker Croll on May 1, 2009, 10:20 amMaybe if you didn't make everything so damned easy to guess.... I suggest you add something such as a site key, where there's a group of images and you select one...

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SecurityBy Anonymous on May 1, 2009, 11:41 amSecurity is only as good as those using it. Kepping a password to an Admin account store in web mail is not secure. Having Web Mail password rest answers that...

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Twitter BreachBy BobP on May 1, 2009, 5:20 pmThey and every other network needs a Trustworthy Platform that is inter operable and transperent to any existing Network. It also should meet OSI-Layer One, Common...

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It's the users!By Anonymous on May 1, 2009, 7:44 pmIf the users weren't so darn stupid, this wouldn't ever happen! Look, a password like "happiness" is just plane stupid! Anybody who has a password like that deserves...

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SergioBy Anonymous on May 3, 2009, 1:39 pmI can't believe Twitter doesn't require VPNs to remotely access admin accounts. Sheesh.

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It's "plane" stupid, huh?By Anonymous on May 4, 2009, 8:32 amIt's "plane" stupid, huh?

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