Elon Musk claims X being targeted in 'massive cyberattack' as service
goes down
[March 11, 2025] By
MICHELLE CHAPMAN and BARBARA ORTUTAY
Hours after a series of outages Monday that left X unavailable to
thousands of users, Elon Musk claimed that the social media platform was
being targeted in a “massive cyberattack.”
“We get attacked every day, but this was done with a lot of resources,"
Musk claimed in a post. "Either a large, coordinated group and/or a
country is involved. Tracing …”
Later on Monday, Musk said on Fox Business Network’s Kudlow that the
attackers had “IP addresses originating in the Ukraine area" without
going into detail on what this might mean.
Cybersecurity experts quickly pointed out, however, that this doesn't
necessarily mean that an attack originated in Ukraine. Security
researcher Kevin Beaumont said on Bluesky that Musk's claim is “missing
a key fact — it was actually IPs from worldwide, not just Ukraine.”
Specifically, he said it was a Mirai variant botnet, which is made of
compromised cameras. He said while he is not sure who is behind the
attack, it “Smells of APTs — advanced persistent teenagers.”
Allan Liska of the cybersecurity firm Recorded Future, meanwhile,
pointed out that even if “every IP address that hit Twitter today
originated from Ukraine (doubtful), they were most likely compromised
machines controlled by a botnet run by a third party that could be
located anywhere in the world.”

Complaints about outages spiked Monday at 6 a.m. Eastern and again at 10
a.m, with more than 40,000 users reporting no access to the platform,
according to the tracking website Downdetector.com. By afternoon, the
reports had dropped to the low thousands.
A sustained outage that lasted at least an hour began at noon, with the
heaviest disruptions occurring along the U.S. coasts.
Downdetector.com said that 56% of problems were reported for the X app,
while 33% were reported for the website.
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Workers install lighting on an "X" sign atop the company
headquarters, formerly known as Twitter, in downtown San Francisco,
on Friday, July 28, 2023. (AP Photo/Noah Berger, File)
 It's not possible to definitively
verify Musk's claims without seeing technical data from X, and the
likelihood of them releasing that is “pretty low,” said Nicholas
Reese, an adjunct instructor at the Center for Global Affairs in New
York University’s School of Professional Studies and expert in cyber
operations.
Reese said the likelihood that a state actor is
behind the outages “doesn't make a lot of sense” given their short
duration — unless it was a warning for something larger to come.
“There are kind of two types of cyber attacks — there are ones that
are designed to be very loud and there are ones that are designed to
be very quiet,” he said. “And the ones that are usually the most
valuable are the ones that are very quiet. Something like this was
designed to be discovered. So to me that almost certainly eliminates
state actors. And the value that they would have gained from it is
pretty low."
Reese added that it's possible that a group was trying to make a
statement with causing X outages, but added that such a temporary
outage “is not much of a statement to me.”
“It’s only really a statement if there is some kind of follow on
action, which I would not rule out at this point,” he said.
In March 2023 the social media platform then known as Twitter
experienced a bevy of glitches for over an hour as links stopped
working, some users were unable to log in and images were not
loading for others.
“X outage” was trending on rival social media platform BlueSky, with
some posts welcoming users to the site and urging them to stick
around.
Musk bought the former Twitter in 2022 and also serves as the CEO of
Tesla. He's running X while simultaneously having access to U.S.
government data systems — often wearing a shirt that says “tech
support.”
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