High profile Twitter
accounts hijacked in Turkish-Dutch protest
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[March 15, 2017]
By Eric Auchard
FRANKFURT
(Reuters) - The diplomatic spat between Turkey and the Netherlands
spread online on Wednesday when a large number of Twitter accounts, many
with no apparent connection to the dispute, were hijacked and replaced
with anti-Nazi messages in Turkish.
The attacks, which appeared to be simply a form of political vandalism
and used the hashtags #Nazialmanya or #Nazihollanda, took over accounts
of high-profile CEOs, publishers, government agencies, politicians and
also some regular Twitter users.
The account hijackings took place as the Dutch began voting on Wednesday
in national elections seen as a test of anti-establishment and
anti-immigrant sentiment held in the midst of a diplomatic spat with
Turkey.
President Tayyip Erdogan has suspended high-level diplomatic ties with
the Netherlands and branded the country's citizens "Nazi remnants" for
preventing his ministers at the weekend from addressing rallies of Turks
living there.
Hijacked accounts featured tweets with Nazi symbols, a variety of
hashtags and the phrase "See you on April 16", an apparent reference to
the date of Turkey's planned referendum to grant Erdogan more powers.
The Twitter accounts hijacked included those of the European Parliament
and the personal profile of French politician Alain Juppe.
They also included the UK Department of Health and BBC North America,
both of which subsequently appear to have recovered, along with the
profile of Marcelo Claure, the chief executive of U.S. telecoms operator
Sprint Corp, which remains hijacked.
Other accounts included publishing sites for Die Welt and Forbes and
several non-profit agencies including Amnesty International and UNICEF
USA as well as Duke University.
The Twitter profile of BBC North America noted: "Hi everyone - we
temporarily lost control of this account, but normal service has
resumed".
A Twitter spokesman said the company was aware the service was hacked
and that it had begun to investigate: "We quickly located the source
which was limited to a third party app. We removed its permissions
immediately," the statement said. It added that no additional accounts
are affected.
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People holding mobile phones are silhouetted against a backdrop
projected with the Twitter logo in this illustration picture taken
September 27, 2013. REUTERS/Kacper Pempel/Illustration/File Photo
At
least some of the hijacked tweets appear to have been hooked up to Twitter
Counter, a Netherlands-based Twitter audience statistics company. In a tweet on
the company's own twitter profile, it acknowledged the service had been hacked.
"We're aware that our service was hacked and have started an investigation into
the matter. We've already taken measures to contain such abuse," it said,
including the ability to post tweets through the Twitter Connect app.
Twitter Counter also was the target of a hack attack in mid-November that led
some of the high-profile Twitter accounts linked to the company's app to spew
out spam tweets, including those of soccer star Lionel Messi and gaming sites
Sony Playstation and Microsoft Xbox. At the time, it said it counted 2 million
users.
The latest attacks appeared unrelated to low-level denial of service attacks
against the websites of a Dutch web hosting company and the Rotterdam airport by
a Turkish hacking group called Aslan Neferler Tim (Lion Soldiers Team).
The same hacking group appears to have been responsible for temporary outages in
August and September last year of the sites of Austrian institutions including
the Vienna airport, the national parliament and Central Bank last year.
Those attacks occurred in the midst of a diplomatic row that followed Austria's
calls for European Union accession talks with Turkey to be dropped.
(Additional reporting by Jeremy Wagstaff in Singapore and Subrat Patnaik in
Bangalore; Editing by Hugh Lawson)
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