Categories: Business

At $136 billion, is this the most expensive tweet in history?

At 1:07 p.m EST the Associated Press’s Twitter account published a tweet claiming that two bombs had exploded at the White House, injuring the President.

By 1:09, just two minutes later, over $136 billion had been wiped off the Standard & Poor’s 500 (S&P) stock market index in New York.

Two Explosions in the White House and Barack Obama is injured.

The tweet, thankfully, was not true – there had been no explosion in the US Capital – but this one fake tweet, coupled with the knee jerk reaction from traders in the city, made a serious dent in the U.S Stock Exchange (from which it has now recovered).

Making it, quite possibly, the most costly tweet in history.

Writing about its own hack the AP said,

“The attack on AP’s Twitter account and the AP Mobile Twitter account was preceded by phishing attempts on AP’s corporate network.

The AP confirmed that its Twitter account had been suspended following a hack and said it was working to correct the issue. The fake tweet went out shortly after 1 p.m. and briefly sent the Dow Jones Industrial Average sharply lower. The Dow fell about 143 points, from 14,697 to 14,554, after the fake Twitter posting, and then quickly recovered.”

The Associated Press and since suspended all its Twitter accounts.

The White House spokesman, Jay Carney, confirmed that Obama was not in any danger.  The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission refused to comment on the events.

The S&P 500 after the AP tweet

According to the AP, the hackers gained access to the account through a phishing email sent to the news agency.  An organisation calling itself the “Syrian Electronic Army” has claimed responsibility, but this has not been confirmed.

However, if this group was responsible it would not be the first time that forces sympathetic to the regime in Syria have successfully hacked a news agency.  In August, Reuters’ website published a story claiming that Syrian rebels were retreating from the city of Aleppo. The story was not true, and resulted in the agency shutting down parts of its website.

A representative of the Associated Press, Paul Colford, said the company is working with Twitter to “investigate the issue”.

Ajit Jain

Ajit Jain is marketing and sales head at Octal Info Solution, a leading iPhone app development company and offering platform to hire Android app developers for your own app development project. He is available to connect on Google Plus, Twitter, Facebook, and LinkedIn.

Recent Posts

AI reasoning and the infinite puzzle of Borges’ Library of Babel

Many people have the intuition that an LLM (Large Language Model, e.g. ChatGPT) doesn't really understand…

3 days ago

UK’s DARPA-inspired ARIA opens ‘Engineering Ecosystem Resilience’ research opportunity

ARIA's opportunity space for engineering ecosystem resilience follows a global trend of public and private…

3 days ago

Healthcare providers now have unprecedented data insights into the patient journey as PurpleLab® acquires KAID Health

In the U.S., we’re seeing an incredible growth of the healthcare analytics market, with the…

4 days ago

First Financial Federal Credit Union prioritizes empathy with Ribbon partnership for inheritance claims 

When our loved ones pass on, it can be one of the most traumatic events…

4 days ago

Tackling antimicrobial resistance with new cleaning protocols

When we hear the word pandemic, our mind is likely to jump to the events…

5 days ago

Peru makes history: defeats Japan to claim Pokémon Unite World Championship title

Team Peru Unite made history in Anaheim, California by defeating Japan’s powerhouse Zeta Division 3-1…

5 days ago