Social networking platform - Twitter
has sent out unexpected warning notices to a number of users, informing them
that their account might have been targeted by state-sponsored hackers.
"We believe that these
actors (possibly associated with a government) may have been trying to obtain
information such as email addresses, IP addresses, and/or phone numbers,"
the message says, but doesn't specify which state might be behind the attack.
The company also allowed that
it's possible that the users' account might not have been an intended target of
the suspected activity, but wanted to alert them just the same.
Among known recipients of the
message are Coldhak, a Winnipeg-based nonprofit; Coldhak director Colin Childs;
privacy and security researcher Runa Sandvik; activists and cryptoparty
organizer Cassie Traun; security researcher Noris Fabio; Tech writer and
programmer David Robinson; and banker and mathematics student Jens Kubieziel
(also the author of a book about anonymity on the Internet).
Kubieziel started a public list
on Twitter of people and organizations that have received the notices. So far,
it comprises of some 30+ users, many of whom are privacy activists, current or
former EFF and Tor contributors, infosec researchers, cryptography evangelists.
The message included
instructions to users on how to protect their identity online, and linked to
the Tor Project and EFF's Protecting Yourself on Social Networks.
Various commenters pointed out
that Twitter has a past of blocking user accounts that are accessed via Tor, but
Twitter said those accusations are unfounded, i.e. that the blocking isn't due
to Tor use, but to other, unrelated reasons.
With these alerts, Twitter
follows in the steps of Google and Facebook, who also push out similar warnings
to targeted users.
Source: Help Net Security
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