Washington: The teenager who allegedly hacked the Twitter accounts of former US president Barack Obama, Bill Gates, Tesla CEO Elon Musk, among other noted personalities in July had started by convincing an employee of the microblogging platform that he was a co-worker, according to authorities as per The Wall Street Journal.
The crime committed by 17-year-old Graham Ivan Clark had an element of hacking combined with social engineering, said Hillsborough County, Florida, State Attorney Andrew Warren.
Apart from this, Clark, who has been charged with compromising over 100 accounts and scamming the account holders as well as hundreds of people who allegedly sent him money, had also seized control of phone numbers through SIM-swapping and set up numerous fake phishing pages.
In March, the microblogging platform had announced work from the home facility for all employees, giving the accused an ideal environment of the kind of attacks in which Clark allegedly specialised, according to security researchers.
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Once inside Twitter, Clark allegedly gained the ability to bypass the company's security protections, setting the stage for an hours-long hack on July 15 that captivated the world's attention and held hostage the main communications tool of some of the most powerful people on the planet, as per The Wall Street Journal.
Investigators and security experts, as per the article, have said that the tricks used by the accused are those which are increasingly being used by online gamers in today's day and age and have resulted in over tens of millions of dollars in losses and affecting thousands.
Clark, meanwhile, spent a lot of time online playing video games and had been accused in online forums of reneging on business deals.