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In the afternoon on July 15th, a hacker (or a team of hackers) got access to a series of Twitter accounts owned by Bitcoin fanatics, businesspeople, and exchanges. Upon getting the access of those accounts, the hackers tweeted messages declaring that they would be “giving 5000 BTC back to the community” and leading users to cryptoforhealth.com. Users who visited the now-nonfunctioning website were assured that if they sent Bitcoin to a particularized address, they would get double the amount in return, plus a bonus if donations surpassed a specific limit. Here is everything you need to know about Twitter bitcoin hack.
The most interesting thing about this hack and potential fraud is that the hackers succeeded to hack the accounts of Billionaires including one of the former presidents of the United States.

Twitter Bitcoin Hack

After the hackers had advertised the message from various Bitcoin-related Twitter accounts, they went huge. The first influential account to be hacked seems to be Elon Musk’s, followed in brief order by Bill Gates, Uber, Apple, Kanye West, Jeff Bezos, Mike Bloomberg, Joe Biden, and former president Barack Obama, among others.

Everything You Should Know about the Twitter Bitcoin Hack

Most of these accounts tweeted some modification of the identical advice: If someone were to send Bitcoin to the address specified in the tweets during a 30-minute window, the account owner would return double the amount. Unluckily, these outsized claims succeeded in fooling some people into sending over worthy cryptocurrency, but no crypto were ever sent in return. (Certainly) All of the tweets sent from these high-profile accounts guided victims to the same Bitcoin address.

Elon Musk Twitter got Hacked

Barack Obama Twitter hacked

At this stage, Twitter had taken on and was trying to restrain the account hacks. To check more scammy messages being shared, Twitter momentarily eliminated the ability for verified users to tweet. If the owners of those accounts needed to write on the platform, they either had to make temporary accounts, retweet existing tweets, or both. (Meanwhile, non-verified Twitter users had a field day.) Twitter seemed to take the situation under control and restored verified users’ ability to tweet at around 8:30 PM Eastern.

Twitter Bitcoin Hack

At that time, Twitter declared that it had started an inquiry into the hack, and one day later, the FBI declared that it was starting an inquiry of its own.

How did hackers do this?

Twitter Bitcoin Hack

At this point, Twitter’s inquiry is still ongoing, and there is little in the way of reliable information. Concerning the hack itself, here’s what the company has revealed so far:

  • Some of its employees were targeted in a social engineering attack because of their access to “internal systems and tools.”
  • The hackers were capable to “take control” of verified and high-profile Twitter accounts, and published the scam tweets “on their behalf”
  • In the aftermath of the breach, Twitter has taken measures to restrict access to the aforementioned internal systems and tools, at least for the duration of the investigation.

Twitter hack news

How much money did hackers make with this hack?

The cost of the hackers’ final stealings isn’t confirmed at the moment. Early on, people observing the address defined in those celebrity tweets noticed that it was the beneficiary of almost $60,000 in Bitcoin transfers. At the time of reporting, the total amount sent to the address in issue reaches at 12.86874316 BTC, or $118,995.75.

Twitter hack details

Nevertheless, much of the cryptocurrency in the billfold affiliated with that address is no longer there. As it stands, the wallet currently holds the equivalent of about $141.

Learn more at: The Difference Between Bitcoin and Real Money

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