The Syrian Electronic Army made headlines for attacks on the
New York Times, but Twitter may have also attracted the group's attention.
In a tweet, the hackers claimed to have gained access to the
DNS servers for twitter.com, along with the Huffington Post UK . Tests
showed the records were indeed changed, but name servers continued to redirect
to the correct IPs, and the change was most likely a result of the breach in a
DNS records holding site.
Multiple tests by The Verge revealed no break in the HTTPS
connection to twitter.com, suggesting the IP connection was never disturbed. It
therefore looks like the SEA is going after the name servers for Twitter, but
hasn't directly hacked Twitter itself.
An official Twitter statement confirmed the hack, saying
that the company's DNS provider had been compromised, and the image server had
been "sporadically impacted" beginning at 4:49PM. Just before 6:30,
the company regained control of the server.
According to the statement, no user information was
compromised.
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