Hackers selling stolen Twitter log-in data

People are seen as silhouettes as they check mobile devices whilst standing against an illuminated wall bearing Twitter Inc.'s logo in this arranged photograph in London, U.K., on Tuesday, Jan. 5, 2016. Twitter Inc. may be preparing to raise its character limit for tweets to the thousands from the current 140, a person with knowledge of the matter said. Photographer: Chris Ratcliffe/Bloomberg via Getty Images

 

AFP

Tens of millions of stolen Twitter credentials evidently lifted from web browser programmes were put up for sale online, according to a search engine devoted to leaked data.
Twitter was adamant that its computer systems had not been broken into by hackers, and that it was not the source of any account information being hawked on the Internet.
“We are confident that these usernames and credentials were not obtained by a Twitter data breach —our systems have not been breached,” a Twitter spokesperson said. “In fact, we’ve been working to help keep accounts protected by checking our data against what’s been shared from recent other
password leaks.”
According to LeakedSource.com, tens of millions of Twitter credentials are being traded on the “dark web,” a section of the Internet
accessed by special software.
The data set reportedly contained more than 32 million Twitter records that could include
information such as usernames, passwords, or email addresses.
LeakedSource said in a blog post that it got a copy of the data set, and noted that it was Twitter users who were evidently hacked and not the San Francisco-based one-to-many messaging service.
It appeared that hackers got the information by using malicious code that steals data from web browsing programmes.
LeakedSource described itself as a search-engine capable of searching over 1.8 billion leaked records gathered “over a relatively short period of time through a combination of deep-web scavenging and
rumour-chasing.”

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