The videos of very drunk people having sexBritish Army faced a breach of its YouTube and Twitter accounts, as confirmed by the Army on Sunday. An investigation is now underway.
The military force's Twitter account was reportedly hacked, replaced with the name of NFT group Bapesclan with their signature cartoon monkey as a profile picture. The description was changed to "#1 metavesto clan on the ETH chain with multi-billion dollar experience. Powered by @chaintchlabs."
The hackers also made the account appear to be associated with The Possessed NFT collection, developed by PSSSSD Labs. Several links to NFT giveaways were retweeted.
Since, the account has been restored, with all such retweets deleted. The Army account tweeted an apology, saying they will "learn from this incident".
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
Meanwhile, the Army YouTube account was replaced with the account name Ark Invest, known to be a global investment firm. There is, however, no indication that said company was behind the breach.
On the YouTube account, The Verge reports, video interviews of Elon Musk talking about crypto were promoted, along with clips of old livestreams by former Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey. These conversations took place last June, in a conference held by Ark Invest. Thousands of viewers reportedly watched the livestreams aired by the hackers. The videos included an overlay which, according to blogger Molly White, directed users to Bitcoin and Ethereum scams.
SEE ALSO: The biggest crypto scams of 2022 (so far)PSSSSD Labs, Bapesclan, and Ark Invest have not publicly commented on the scam.
The YouTube channel had been restored, but at the time of writing, it appears the account has been "terminated for violating YouTube's Community Guidelines."
The account posted a video yesterday, updating the public on air and land defence, soldiers and army sport. Commenters trolled the post though, with some writing "Great crypto advice" and "Where are my NFT drops".
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
The Ministry of Defence Press Office also tweeted about the breach, confirming an investigation underway.
"The Army takes information security extremely seriously and until their investigation is complete it would be inappropriate to comment further," the account's tweet reads.
Theresa May attempts the wave, fails, becomes memeThe Grammys finally make the switch to online votingTropical Storm Ian delays NASA's Artemis I launch for third timeThis man's celebrity encounter on the Tube is just gloriousMom gets the halfOn Mars, NASA detects fresh new impact craters from space rocksTwitter queen J.K. Rowling helps out pal Stephen King after he's blocked by TrumpBBC reporter accidentally drops the cSamurai armor for pets is here, and it's unbelievably badassUber's CEO reportedly sent out rules for sex between employees before a 2013 party Best streaming deal: Get three free months of Peacock Premium Daniel in the Lion’s Den Douyin launches ride 23andMe's DNA data is going up for sale again Today's Hurdle hints and answers for June 6, 2025 Elon Musk and Donald Trump's feud has exploded YouTube is bringing more ads to Premium Lite plans CATL to announce new factory in Europe this year: executive · TechNode Asteroid zooms through Hubble telescope's deep space picture One of the best Nintendo Switch 2 launch games is just $15
0.1351s , 14212.296875 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【videos of very drunk people having sex】British Army's social media accounts hacked to promote cryptocurrency scams,Global Hot Topic Analysis