The singer's Twitter and Instagram accounts were briefly seized by at least one hacker who vowed to release naked pictures of Swift if supporters paid enough in the form of the virtual currency bitcoin.
Taylor Swift on Tuesday scoffed at a hacker who took over her
social media accounts and threatened to release nude pictures, with the
pop star saying none existed.
The
singer's Twitter and Instagram accounts were briefly seized by at least
one hacker who vowed to release naked pictures of Swift if supporters
paid enough in the form of the virtual currency bitcoin.
"Any
hackers saying they have 'nudes'?" Swift wrote after retaking control
of her Twitter account. "Psssh you'd love that wouldn't you! Have fun
photoshopping cause you got NOTHING."
Little
was known about the presumed hacker, whose account was suspended by
Twitter. The user who threatened to release nude photos had the Twitter
handle @lizzard and signed as lizard in Japanese.
@lizzard,
in a Twitter biography before the account was suspended, claimed —
incongruously — to be affiliated at once with the Islamic State
extremist group, the hactivist collective Anonymous and North Korea.
Swift joked about the hacking, writing, "This is why I'm scared of technology."
Swift,
whose "1989" was by far the best-selling US album released last year,
famously pulled all of her music from Spotify as she said that the
streaming service insufficiently compensated artists, charges denied by
the Swedish company.
But Swift is
intensively active on other parts of the Internet. She is one of only
four people with more than 50 million followers on Twitter. The others
are US President Barack Obama and fellow pop stars Katy Perry and Justin
Bieber.
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