WE had our Twitter account hacked. We can assure you that Jack is ALIVE and WELL and that this was a sick "prank".
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8 year oldThe teen’s 16 million followers were shocked when a series of lewd and offensive messages were tweeted f-rom her account on Sunday.
“I love being famous with no talent,” one of the tweets said, while another read: “Well my sex tape with Tyga was trash.”
Another tweet involved singer Justin Bieber: “I want your c**k @justinbieber.”
But rather than immediately de-lete the tweets, the 18-year-old responded to them on Snapchat.
“So my Twitter was hacked and I don’t really care, I’m just letting him have fun,” the reality TV star said.
However, she did shut down rumours that she and rapper ex Tyga were releasing an X-rated home video.
“Everyone is like ‘leak the sex tape.’ Guys, you are never going to see a sex tape f-rom me. It’s not going to happen,” she said.
The hacker @lolsw4y, whose account has now been deactivated, was the same userwho last week attacked Katy Perry.
The Firework singer, who is the most followed user on Twitter, has since de-leted the profanity-laden tweets, which included a message to her rival Taylor Swift, saying “miss you baby”.
The pop stars are said to have a rocky relationship and Swift’s Bad Blood single is rumoured to be about their public feud.
Screengrabs of the now-removed tweets, some of which were homophobic and racist, were shared online in the hours following the security breach.
Jenner and Perry are the latest in a long line of celebs whose social media accounts have been taken over.
On Sunday, tweets f-rom the official account of band Tenacious D claimed singerJack Black had died. The news whipped fans into a frenzy, with tributes pouring in online.
The hacking was later confirmed by Tenacious D themselves, who said it was nothing but a “sick prank”.
Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg was also the target of hackers. OurMine Team embarrassingly took over his Twitter and Pinterest accounts.
The group used his Twitter account to announce they accessed his accounts because they found his password “dadada” in the details of stolen LinkedIn accounts of more than 164 million people that were leaked online last month.
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