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Mark Zuckerberg’s Social Media Accounts Restored After Alleged Hack

Responding to the hacking of CEO and Co-Founder, Mark Zuckerberg’s social media platforms; Twitter and Pinterest over the weekend, a spokesman from the social media platform on Monday said the accounts have been re-secured.

Facebook Spokesman told Reuters that, the accounts have been re-secured using best practices, he also added that, “no Facebook systems or accounts were accessed.”

Zuckerberg’s Twitter account, last used in January 2012, posted a tweet on Sunday with the message, “Hey, @finkd You were in LinkedIn Datatbase with the password ‘dadada’ ! DM (direct message) for proof,” according to a screenshot posted to Twitter by Ben Hall Founder of Katacoda, an interactive learning platform for software developers.

The tweet appeared to ask Zuckerberg to contact the sender, who claimed to have accessed his account.

Zuckerberg’s Pinterest page, meanwhile, was defaced with the headline “Hacked By OurMine Team” according to a screengrab of the page posted by VentureBeat.

“Hey, we are just testing your security, please DM (direct message) us for contact! twitter: twitter.com/_OurMine_,” the compromised page said in a message that seemingly identified the hackers as being associated with the linked Twitter account.

The Twitter page associated with that account, @_OurMine_, has since been suspended.

Pinterest did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

“A number of other online services have seen millions of passwords stolen in the past several weeks,” a Twitter spokesperson said. “We recommend people use a unique, strong password for Twitter.”

The nature of the tweet sent from Zuckerberg’s account on Sunday suggested the alleged hackers may have gained access to the account by using the same password associated with his LinkedIn profile.

“We’ve invalidated all accounts believed to be at risk here,” a LinkedIn spokesperson said.[related-posts]

Last month, LinkedIn acknowledged that a 2012 data theft may have affected far more users than originally thought.

The professional networking site said on May 18 that it was working to invalidate the passwords of some 100 million accounts after it “became aware of an additional set of data that had just been released that claims to be email and hashed password combinations of more than 100 million LinkedIn members from that same theft in 2012.”

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