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Twitter Hack Public Court Hearing Via Zoom Gets Hacked With P*rn Clips!

Twitter hack hearing of the 17-year-old suspected hacker via Zoom did not go as planned as mischief-makers zoombombed it. In the end, the judge had to end the virtual hearing.

 

According to a report on the hearing from The Verge, the judge had left the meeting accessible to the public. He mentioned that it was in compliance with Florida law that admitted members of the public who wished to join to do so.

 

While the judge, Christopher Nash, was in charge of admitting people to the call, he could only see their usernames and had no way of knowing for sure who they are. The result?

 

A catastrophic zoombombing session ensued. The zoombombers made distracting noises, they screamed curse words at the lawyers, at the judge, at the defendant (the 17-year-old did not even show up live on the call).

 

Additionally, the miscreants were playing clips from PornHub every few minutes. Nash spent most of the time throwing them out of the call but they were not to be defeated.

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Yet, the lawyers were able to pass their message across. The prosecution revealed that this is likely not the first time the accused was involved in a bitcoin scam.

 

Graham Ivan Clark, the 17-year-old tagged the mastermind behind the Twitter hack and bitcoin scam, is said to have $3 million in bitcoin currency. This is after the authorities had confiscated nearly $1.1 million from him, according to his lawyer.

 

Also, despite the distractions, Judge Nash placed Clark’s bail at $725,000. Learning from this hearing, he further said that future hearings via Zoom of the Twitter hack would require passwords.

 

While Zoom had faced criticism over zoombombing, it has fixed the issues. Hosts have gotten a lot of security measures for Zoom calls, but it seems the court had not engaged a cybersecurity expert before this session.

 

Details are still emerging about how Clark and his two other accomplices managed to pull off the Twitter hack and run the bitcoin scam. However, Twitter has revealed that they used a spearphishing attack to compromise its employees.

 

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Onwuasoanya Obinna

A reader of books and stringer of words. Passionate about Science and Tech. When not writing or reading he is surfing the web and Tweeting.

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