It’s Not Too Late for Some Victims of the Twitter Scam to Get Their Money Back

Published at: July 17, 2020

There are still 14 victims of the massive Twitter hack that could still get their Bitcoin back.

These victims sent some Bitcoin to a hacker address, but their transactions are still unconfirmed on the Bitcoin network. They are currently hanging in limbo, or Bitcoin mempool. These transactions seem to be unconfirmed after many hours because the senders designated a very low transaction fee that’s unattractive to miners.

Bitcoin Core developer Wladimir van der Laan confirmed this to Cointelegraph. “Miners pick the highest fee-rate transactions, but also might have some minimum fee below which they won't mine transactions at all,” he said.

For instance, one transaction proposed a fee of 2 Satoshis per byte. The expected delay for a transaction with such a low fee is between 35 and 780 minutes. As van der Laan explained, they may never get processed:

“It's possible they'll be processed when there is really nothing more attractive in the mempool (e.g. some downtime in the weekend with little new transactions?), but also, it's possible they'll never be processed and just forgotten about.”

How these victims can get their money back

The victims with their transactions lingering in mempool can send the same Bitcoin (with the same inputs) to another address they control with higher fees. Even if the miners ever get to processing their original transactions, they will not be confirmed because the Bitcoin protocol checks for the validity of the inputs. Since those inputs would have been spent, the original transactions would be rejected.

Hopefully, at least some of the victims will learn their lesson without paying the price.

Tags
Related Posts
Report: Crypto crimes declined in 2020, but DeFi hacks are on the rise
Cryptocurrency-related crimes have slowed down in 2020, but some sectors within the crypto industry have become a new hotbed for criminal activity, a new report says. Citing major crypto analytics firm CipherTrace, Reuters reported on Nov. 10 that total losses from crypto thefts, hacks and fraud dropped from $4.4 billion in 2019 to $1.8 billion over the first 10 months of 2020. CipherTrace CEO Dave Jevans said that the general decline of criminal activity in the crypto industry is a result of increased security measures: “What we have seen is that exchanges and other cryptocurrency players have implemented more security …
Bitcoin / Nov. 10, 2020
A 17 Year Old Was Just Arrested in Connection With Twitter's Recent Hack
Authorities have taken a 17-year-old into custody, alleging the not-yet-adult cooked up the massive Twitter breach. "Early this morning, the FBI, IRS, US Secret Service, and Florida law enforcement placed a 17-year-old in Tampa, Florida, under arrest — accusing him of being the 'mastermind' behind the biggest security and privacy breach in Twitter’s history," a July 31 article from The Verge said. The massive exploit saw many top Twitter accounts breached on July 15, including the likes of Elon Musk, Joe Biden and Bill Gates. “Our offices found 30 felony charges against Clark, including organized fraud, communications fraud, identity theft …
Blockchain / July 31, 2020
Cellebrite Launches Crypto Tracer Solution to Track Illicit Transactions
Digital intelligence firm Cellebrite has launched its “Cellebrite Crypto Tracer” solution. The new offering is powered by CipherTrace and aims to trace illicit cryptocurrencies involved in money laundering, terrorism, drugs, human trafficking, weapon sales and ransomware schemes. The suite of tools will be available to investigators, analysts and non-technical agents who want to lawfully obtain evidence and trace criminals who use cryptos like Bitcoin (BTC) through the darknet. Citing figures from an Oxford University study, Cellebrite states that an estimated $76 billion worth of illegal activities involve Bitcoin. Curating millions of information references to trace transactions The Cellebrite Crypto Tracer …
Technology / July 28, 2020
Twitter Has Been Trying to Hire Senior Security Engineers for Two Months
If the company’s jobs site is any indication, Twitter has been openly hiring for security positions in the months leading up to this week’s notorious hack. According to the company’s job search, Twitter posted several key job descriptions pertaining to company security two months ago. The company was (and still seems to be) hiring for a senior infrastructure security engineer, senior security engineer, two senior application security engineers and staff product manager for security and data protection among several others. A job description for one of these positions focuses on the reduction of security risks across the company: “As a …
Blockchain / July 17, 2020
Report: Bitcoin Scam Compromising Google and Target Accounts Came from Third Party App
A recent Bitcoin scam on Twitter that compromised several major companies verified accounts came from a third-party app, tech news outlet the Next Web (TNW) reports Friday, Nov. 16, citing social media officials. Speaking to TNW, a Twitter spokesperson confirmed that the attack came from an outside software provider and not from Twitter’s own system. However, the official refrained from naming the app. The spokesperson reportedly explained that the attackers exploited a third-party marketing solution to launch a Bitcoin (BTC) giveaway from several verified accounts, including Google’s G Suite and major U.S. department store retailer Target. The information was implicitly …
Bitcoin / Nov. 16, 2018