Twitter hacker sentenced to 5 years in prison

Share post:

A British hacker, Joseph James O’Connor, 24, who was part of a group that broke into dozens of high-profile Twitter accounts in 2020 has been sentenced to five years in prison.

O’Connor was sentenced in a New York federal court to five years in prison after pleading guilty in May to four counts of computer hacking, wire fraud and cyberstalking. O’Connor also agreed to forfeit at least $794,000 to the victims of his crimes.

O’Connor, who used the online handle PlugWalkJoe, was part of a group that used phone-based social engineering techniques to trick Twitter employees into granting them access to Twitter’s network. Once they had access, the hackers were able to hijack and reassign Twitter user accounts, including those of Apple, Binance, Bill Gates, Joe Biden and Elon Musk. The group then used the hacked accounts to spread cryptocurrency get-rich-quick scams.

In court, O’Connor apologized to his victims and said his crimes were “stupid and pointless.” He also asked the judge for leniency, saying that he had learned his lesson and was committed to turning his life around. The judge eventually sentenced O’Connor to five years in prison, but said that he would likely serve about half of that time.

The sources for this piece include an article in TechCrunch.

SUBSCRIBE NOW

Related articles

North Korean Job Scam Targeting IT Job Seekers

North Korea’s Lazarus advanced persistent threat (APT) group has launched a sophisticated campaign, “Operation 99,” targeting freelance software...

Hackers Exploit FastHTTP in High-Speed Microsoft 365 Attacks

Threat actors are employing the FastHTTP Go library to launch high-speed brute-force password attacks on Microsoft 365 accounts...

YouTubers Targeted As Cyberattackers Hide Infostealers in YouTube Comments, Google Search Results

Attackers have found a new way to infect people seeking pirated or cracked software: planting malicious download links...

New macOS Malware Exploits Apple’s Security Features to Stay Hidden and Steal User Data

A newly discovered variant of the Banshee macOS Stealer malware is putting 100 million Apple users at risk...

Become a member

New, Relevant Tech Stories. Our article selection is done by industry professionals. Our writers summarize them to give you the key takeaways