Twitter breach exposed anonymous account owners
SAN FRANSISCO — A vulnerability in Twitter’s software that
exposed an undetermined number of owners of anonymous accounts to potential
identity compromise last year was apparently exploited by a malicious actor,
the social media company said.
It did not confirm a report that data on 5.4 million users
was offered for sale online as a result but said users worldwide were affected,
AP reports.
The breach is especially worrisome because many Twitter
account owners, including human rights activists, do not disclose their
identities in their profiles for security reasons that include fear of
persecution by repressive authorities.
“This is very bad for many who use pseudonymous Twitter
accounts,” U.S. Naval Academy data security expert Jeff Kosseff tweeted.
The vulnerability allowed someone to determine during log-in
whether a particular phone number or email address was tied to an existing
Twitter account, thereby revealing account owners, the company said.
Twitter said it did not know how many users may have been
affected, and stressed that no passwords were exposed.
“We can confirm the impact was global,” a Twitter
spokesperson said via email. “We cannot determine exactly how many accounts
were impacted or the location of the account holders.”
Twitter’s acknowledgment in a blog post Friday followed a
report last month by t he digital privacy advocacy group Restore Privacy
detailing how data presumably obtained from the vulnerability was being sold on
a popular hacking forum for $30,000.
A security researcher discovered the flaw in January,
informed Twitter and was paid a reported $5,000 bounty. Twitter said the bug,
introduced in a June 2021 software update, was immediately fixed.
Twitter said it learned about the data sale on the hacking
forum from media reports and “confirmed that a bad actor had taken advantage of
the issue before it was addressed.”
It said it was directly notifying all account owners that it
can confirm were affected.
“We are publishing this update because we aren’t able to
confirm every account that was potentially impacted, and are particularly
mindful of people with pseudonymous accounts who can be targeted by state or
other actors,” the company said.
It recommended users seeking to keep their identities veiled
not add a publicly known phone number or email address to their Twitter
account.
“If you operate a pseudonymous Twitter account, we
understand the risks an incident like this can introduce and deeply regret that
this happened,” it said.
The revelation of the breach comes while Twitter is in a
legal battle with Tesla CEO Elon Musk over his attempt to back out from his
previous offer to buy San Francisco-based Twitter for $44 billion.
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