Hackers have taken over a wave of Twitter accounts to aggressively advertise a website that claims to be selling face masks and toilet paper during the coronavirus pandemic.
The news highlights the sorts of unusual steps those trying to make a profit during the pandemic are taking. Accounts posted hundreds of tweets linking to the website over the last few hours.
"Wearing mask make you away from COVID-19," one tweet in broken English from a hacked account reads, which then includes a tweet to a website called "Masks 2 U."
Todd Feathers, a writer who covers artificial intelligence and surveillance for Motherboard, confirmed hackers targeted his account to post the message.
"According to Twitter, my account was last accessed by a computer in Virginia, about 40 minutes before I logged on and realized what was happening," he said in a Twitter direct message.
From there, as well as posting a tweet advertising the masks website, whoever was in control of Feathers' account sent direct messages to a high number of his followers with a link to the site as well, Feathers said.
"They sent DMs to what looks like all (or at least a lot) of my followers with a link to masksfast.us and some variation of the message: 'Masks save lives.'," Feathers said.
Do you know anything else about how hackers or scammers are leveraging the coronavirus? We'd love to hear from you. Using a non-work phone or computer, you can contact Joseph Cox securely on Signal on +44 20 8133 5190, Wickr on josephcox, OTR chat on jfcox@jabber.ccc.de, or email joseph.cox@vice.com.
Searching for the site on Twitter reveals a heavy stream of other accounts posting the link on Tuesday. Some of these accounts also appear to have been hacked—the accounts themselves were created years ago and posted relatively normal content before the masks site tweet.
"I didn't post this!" one person tweeted after their account posted a link to the masks site. Hackers may have compromised the accounts earlier rather than hacking them simply for posting this specific link.
The barebones website itself claims to sell face masks, respirators, digital thermometers, and toilet roll. It is unclear if it is purely a scam designed to take money without delivering a product, or whether the site actually has access to the products.
Whoever controls the site created it on Monday, according to online records. Feathers said he received an email from Twitter saying someone had accessed his account from Virginia just before his account posted the link to the masks website. The hackers may have been using a computer based in Virginia but are themselves located elsewhere, however.
Motherboard found other near identical masks websites hosted on the same IP address as the site mentioned by the hacked accounts. Some of these sites were created a few days earlier.
Twitter did not immediately provide a statement.
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