Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Social Media
  3. Legacy Archives

Burger King Twitter account hacked, McDonald’s was (probably) lovin’ it

Add as a preferred source on Google
Burger King hack lead
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Burger King’s social media manager has a whopper of a problem. This afternoon, a hacker or group of hackers took over the fast food chain’s Twitter account, and changed the account name to its greasy nemesis “McDonald’s.” The hackers also claimed in the account’s bio that Burger King had been bought out by McDonald’s “because the Whopper flopped.”

More than two hours after the first unauthorized tweet went live, @BurgerKing remained in the hacker’s hands. Twitter suspended the account at about 1:15pm ET, but not before the perpetrators managed to send out a flurry of offensive tweets, which were quickly retweeted thousands of times.

Recommended Videos

More than 20,000 people started following @BurgerKing while it was under the hackers’ control.

The perpetrator of the @BurgerKing account hijacking repeatedly called out @DFNCTSC, or the Defonic Team Screen Name Club, a group of hackers that broke into Paris Hilton’s Sidekick back in 2005 and released her racy photos onto the Web. One member of the group, a 17-year-old from Massachusetts, pled guilty to the hack in September 2005.

At one point, the hackers asked users to “follow us” with links to massively popular Anonymous Twitter account @YourAnonNews. A later tweet from @YourAnonNews stated that “the King has been dethroned.” So far, that’s the closest thing we have to an admission that @YourAnonNews was involved in the hack.

The first mention of the @BurgerKing hack appears to have come from Twitter user @57UN, or “Stun,” a self-described “Linux fanatic,” whose Twitter profile indicates that “she” is from the Netherlands. It’s not clear whether Stun had anything to do with the hack, or if she was simply one of the first to know about it. In a later tweet, Stun mentioned that, “if you’re a large multinational company, don’t make your password ‘whopper123.'”

It is also not yet clear who is in charge of Burger King’s Twitter account. The company has an internal media department. Another company, Coyne PR, also provides public relations services for Burger King. We have reached out to both Burger King and Coyne about the incident, but have not yet heard a response.

After Twitter had shut down Burger King’s account, McDonald’s sent out a tweet clarifying that it had “nothing to do with the hacking.” 

See some of the all-out mess below (some NSFW language):

BK hack
Image used with permission by copyright holder
BK hack 2
Image used with permission by copyright holder
BK hack 3
Image used with permission by copyright holder
Andrew Couts
Features Editor for Digital Trends, Andrew Couts covers a wide swath of consumer technology topics, with particular focus on…
Topics
X wants to stop creators from farming stolen viral clips for easy money
The platform is reducing payouts for users accused of reposting stolen content and gaming engagement.
Twitter X Logo Featured Banner

For years now, X has quietly rewarded one of the internet’s most annoying business models: stealing someone else’s content, reposting it faster, slapping “BREAKING” on top, and farming millions of impressions before the original creator even realizes what happened. Now, the platform finally seems ready to crack down on that entire ecosystem.

X says repost farmers and clickbait accounts are losing payouts

Read more
The police have entered the chat and they want social media bans for users under 16
From private messaging to weak age checks, UK police want six dangerous features gone for kids.
a boy using iPhone

UK law enforcement is done waiting for tech companies to sort themselves out. The National Crime Agency (NCA) and National Police Chiefs' Council (NPCC) have jointly called for children under 16 to be blocked from any social media, gaming apps, or AI that fails to disable what they describe as "high-risk" features.

This comes as the UK government is actively consulting on whether to introduce a full social media ban for under-16 users, per the BBC.

Read more
Social media is stealing your happiness one scroll at a time
The more time you spend scrolling, the more your happiness takes a hit.
Social Media Apps

Doom-scrolling is the worst. The mind-numbing spiral starts with "just five minutes" and ends an hour or three later with you feeling somehow worse about your life than before. I had to delete Instagram from my iPhone just to stop myself from wasting hours every night. 

If you have also felt that feeling of despair after a scrolling session, it turns out that feeling is backed by science. The World Happiness Report, published by the Wellbeing Research Centre at the University of Oxford, has found a clear link between excessive social media use and declining wellbeing. And it's hitting younger people, especially girls, in the Western world, the hardest.

Read more