Dmitri
Medvedev Twitter account hacked
Russian
Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev's Twitter account was apparently
hacked on Thursday and used to criticize the Russian government and
President Vladimir Putin.
The
first tweet, published on Medvedev's official Twitter account
@MedvedevRussia, said -- via translation by The Interpreter -- that
he was "resigning," and added that he was "ashamed of
the actions of the [Russian] government." Not long after,
Medvedev's account put out a series of tweets criticizing Putin and
retweets from anti-Russia protesters, including praise of Yale
attorney and activist Alexei Navalny, an influential anti-Putin
activist.
The
tweets were scrubbed from Medvedev's Russian account, which has more
than 2.5 million followers, within an hour after they appeared. No
tweets have since been published acknowledging that the account was
hacked. Medvedev's English language account, @MedvedevRussiaE, does
not appear to have been affected.
The
Russian government has not commented on the supposed hack.
As
prime minister, some see Medvedev as little more than another
mouthpiece for Putin. In 2012, Putin appointed Medvedev, who
previously served as president of Russia, as the prime minister and
the official leader of the United Russia Party. Medvedev also acts as
the international face for Russia at meetings with foreign
governments.
It's
not clear at this point how his account was hacked. Russia has
increasingly become a focus for activist hackers as the government
continues to tighten its control of the Internet. So far, no activist
groups have taken credit for the hack.
CNET
has contacted Russia's embassy in the US for comment. We will update
this story when we have more information.
(Via
BusinessInsider)
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