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The Discord scam was posted by someone who took control over the Yuga Labs community manager account. Yuga Labs Confirms Discord Server Hack; 200 ETH Worth of NFTs Stolen Skip to main content
OurMine, a hacker group of unknown origin that has compromised various websites and Twitter accounts as a way of advertising their "professional services". P.H.I.R.M., an early hacking group that was founded in the early 1980s. Phone Losers of America, an internet prank call community founded in 1994 as a phone phreaking and hacking group.
The company falsely asserted that paying them would "fully delete" the profiles, which the hack proved was untrue. [ 14 ] Josh Duggar , a 27-year-old man who had become famous as a teenage member of a conservative Christian family featured on a reality television series named 19 Kids and Counting , was one notable user of Ashley Madison whose ...
CityDAO, the experiment into decentralized land ownership, has fallen victim to a $95,000 hack by fraudsters on gaming instant messaging site Discord. "The Hash" team reacts, discussing the ...
Clark is widely regarded as the "mastermind" of the 2020 Twitter account hijacking, [4] [5] an event in which Clark worked with Mason Sheppard and Nima Fazeli to compromise 130 high-profile Twitter accounts to push a cryptocurrency scam involving bitcoin along with seizing "OG" (short for original) usernames to sell on OGUsers.
A compromised (hacked) account means someone else accessed your account by obtaining your password. Spoofed email occurs when the "From" field of a message is altered to show your address, which doesn't necessarily mean someone else accessed your account. You can identify whether your account is hacked or spoofed with the help of your Sent folder.
A week later, Anonymous increased their claim to 20,000 pro-ISIS accounts and released a list of the accounts. [192] [193] The list included the Twitter accounts of Barack Obama, Hillary Clinton, The New York Times, and BBC News. The BBC reported that most of the accounts on the list appeared to be still active. [194]
Hamza Bendelladj (Arabic: حمزة بن دلاج, romanized: Ḥamza ben Delāj; born 1988) [1] [2] is an Algerian cyberhacker and carder who goes by the code name BX1 [3] and has been nicknamed the "Smiling Hacker".