US president Barack Obama's Twitter account was one of
several hacked by a French man convicted for the crime late
last week. Photo by AP.
A court in central France has convicted a young Frenchman
accused of infiltrating Twitter and peeping at the account of
President Barack Obama, and given him a five-month suspended
prison sentence.
The lawyer for Francois Cousteix, whose online name was
Hacker Croll, said his client was happy with the decision by
the Clermont-Ferrand court.
He risked up to two years in prison and a €30,000 fine for
breaking into a data system.
"The verdict is satisfying, given all the media pressure that
built up," attorney Jean-Francois Canis said by telephone.
Cousteix, 24, infiltrated Twitter, and the accounts of Obama
and singers Britney Spears and Lilly Allen, among other
celebrities, but maintained that his motives were good - to
warn internet users about data security.
Prosecutors said Cousteix did not have access to sensitive
information about the American president.
Cousteix managed to break into the accounts by searching
information that is most commonly used for passwords, such as
birth dates or pet names, on social networking sites.
He lives with his parents and has no college degree, and has
not had any special computer training.
After his arrest, Cousteix told France-3 television: "It's a
message I wanted to get out to internet users, to show them
that no system is invulnerable."
Twitter said last July that it was the victim of a security
breach.
The French prosecutor said Cousteix infiltrated the accounts
of several Twitter administrative employees. He was able to
access information such as contracts with partners and
resumes from job applicants.
Hacker Croll emailed some of the documents to TechCrunch, a
widely read technology blog, and it subsequently published
some of them, including financial projections.
Some of the material was more embarrassing than damaging,
like floor plans for new office space and a pitch for a
Twitter TV show.
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