Bitcoin enthusiasts face bigger problems than twitter scam
Bitcoin fell as much as 1.9% in Thursday’s session to trade as low as $9,037 in New York -- just points away from testing the critical $9,000 support level.
By Bloomberg | Updated:
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The event is another example of how blockchain technology -- the digital ledger that underpins cryptocurrencies -- could help bolster security for a company like Twitter
By Vildana Hajric
A Twitter hack this week featured Bitcoin in one of its most high-profile scams. But technical indicators suggest that could be just the start of problems for investors in the largest cryptocurrency.
Bitcoin fell as much as 1.9% in Thursday’s session to trade as low as $9,037 in New York -- just points away from testing the critical $9,000 support level. In addition, the GTI Vera Convergence Divergence Indicator, which measures up and down shifts, triggered a new sell signal, the first since early June, when the coin failed to breach $10,000.
“A break below $9,000 would raise a yellow warning flag on Bitcoin,” said Matt Maley, chief market strategist for Miller Tabak + Co. A subsequent drop below the mid-May low of $8,636 would signify a red flag, he said.
Bitcoin’s retreat follows news that Twitter accounts of some of the most prominent U.S. political and business leaders -- including Barack Obama, Joe Biden, Jeff Bezos and Warren Buffett -- were hacked Wednesday in an apparent effort to promote a scam involving the cryptocurrency.
You too can lose money to a Twitter hacker, and how!
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This time it was just a cryptocurrency scam. But what happens if hackers infiltrate Twitter again and take aim at financial markets? It’s easy to imagine a scenario where, instead of tweeting about Bitcoin, a hacked Elon Musk account plunges Tesla Inc.’s stock into a tailspin. It would only take a few seconds for a rogue @realDonaldTrump to send financial shockwaves around the world. (Authors: Abhishek Vishnoi, Anchalee Worrachate and Theo Golden)
This time it was just a cryptocurrency scam. But what happens if hackers infiltrate Twitter again and take aim at financial markets? It’s easy to imagine a scenario where, instead of tweeting about B..
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For investors who rely on platforms like Twitter to navigate markets, Wednesday’s cyber attack on the accounts of prominent US business and political leaders is a reminder that no source of information is infallible. It also highlights the myriad risks posed by hackers in an era when decisions about trading, and much else, are increasingly made by hyper-fast computers instead of humans.
For investors who rely on platforms like Twitter to navigate markets, Wednesday’s cyber attack on the accounts of prominent US business and political leaders is a reminder that no source of informati..
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“It definitely exposes the vulnerability of our own credentials and processes,” Deven Choksey, a strategist at KRChoksey Investment Managers Pvt in Mumbai. “A false or mischievous communication can pose a very big and serious threat to the entire financial system.”
“It definitely exposes the vulnerability of our own credentials and processes,” Deven Choksey, a strategist at KRChoksey Investment Managers Pvt in Mumbai. “A false or mischievous communication can p..
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The hack took place just after 4 p.m. New York time on Wednesday, after U.S. markets closed and before the Asia open. Within a short span of time, the Twitter accounts of high-profile figures such as Bill Gates and Kayne West, along with companies like Uber Technologies Inc. and Apple Inc., were urging followers to send funds via Bitcoin.
The hack took place just after 4 p.m. New York time on Wednesday, after U.S. markets closed and before the Asia open. Within a short span of time, the Twitter accounts of high-profile figures such as..
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Twitter said it had detected “a coordinated social engineering attack by people who successfully targeted some of our employees with access to internal systems and tools” and has started an investigation into the incident. The company’s shares fell as much as 4.7% on Thursday. Many of the details behind the attack and what other information the criminals could have accessed are still unknown. For now, the hack doesn’t seem to have affected markets, but the potential for chaos and confusion from similar events remains.
Twitter said it had detected “a coordinated social engineering attack by people who successfully targeted some of our employees with access to internal systems and tools” and has started an investiga..
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“As a trader of equities, commodities, or fixed income, one would be remiss in not having some automatic Twitter feed,” said Tom di Galoma, director of government trading and strategy at Seaport Global Holdings in New York. “However given the recent news, I would have to say traders will have second thoughts on the validity of the news.” Back then, fewer executives and politicians used Twitter and computerized trading wasn’t nearly as sophisticated. It all means that there’s the potential for a future attack to have a far greater impact, especially if it’s credible-seeming news coming from influential accounts.
“As a trader of equities, commodities, or fixed income, one would be remiss in not having some automatic Twitter feed,” said Tom di Galoma, director of government trading and strategy at Seaport Glob..
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No one has swayed financial markets through Twitter as much as U.S. President Donald Trump, who regularly gives updates on everything from Chinese trade to energy policy on the platform. In April, Trump sparked a surge in oil prices of more than 30% by announcing that Saudi Arabia and Russia would make major output cuts. Musk has also relied on Twitter for market-moving announcements. He shocked investors in 2018 and sparked a brief rally in Tesla shares when he tweeted about taking it private at $420. (Many people assumed his feed was hacked -- it hadn’t been.) Three weeks later, he backtracked and said the company would remain public.
No one has swayed financial markets through Twitter as much as U.S. President Donald Trump, who regularly gives updates on everything from Chinese trade to energy policy on the platform. In April, Tr..
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Retail investors, who have access to fewer sources of real-time information and often rely on social media for trading tips, are among the investors most at risk for being conned, according to Viraj Patel, a currency and macro strategist at Arkera Inc. in London. “Retail traders now have a huge influence on stock markets, potentially just reading a headline and acting quite quickly,” he said. “That is worrying.”
Retail investors, who have access to fewer sources of real-time information and often rely on social media for trading tips, are among the investors most at risk for being conned, according to Viraj ..
The accounts sent out tweets promising to double the money of anyone sending funds via Bitcoin within 30 minutes, prompting the popular crypto exchange Coinbase Inc. to block its users from sending money to the address.
The hack duped people into sending at least $120,000 worth of Bitcoin to an anonymous online wallet, and more than half of that total has already been spirited to other accounts, Bloomberg News reported.
“Yesterday’s Twitter hack was a great reminder of how vulnerable cryptocurrency traders are to hacking incidents,” said Edward Moya, senior market analyst at Oanda. “Malicious activity has always been a concern for Bitcoin and those concerns are not going away anytime soon.”
To others, though, the event is another example of how blockchain technology -- the digital ledger that underpins cryptocurrencies -- could help bolster security for a company like Twitter. “Because of this technology, social media could undergo a major structural change to make this insecurity and impermanence, more permanent and tamper proof,” said Keld van Schreven, co-founder and managing director of KR1 Plc.