#OpFakeAnon > @YourAnonCentral

Questions are being raised about a popular Twitter account claiming affiliation with Anonymous. Image
The surge in interest for the movement led one Twitter account, @YourAnonCentral, to gain well over five million new followers in less than than a week.

The account has been active since 2011 and is one several large accounts related to Anonymous.
While many are now questioning if the profile is legitimate, the issue is more complex given the nature of the hacking collective.
Anonymous is not a group with a hierarchy or leadership. Anonymous is more akin to a movement. Even the emblem used to portray Anonymous, a headless man in a suit, is intended to convey its leaderless structure.
Yet @YourAnonCentral has managed to push its way to the forefront, with millions of Twitter users now seemingly believing it to be an authoritative source of secret knowledge.

But it’s provenance is extremely unclear.
The @YourAnonCentral profile deems itself the “official” account for the hacking collective despite such claims running contrary to the movement’s ethos.

And the account did not gain prominence with the leak of new data and information, it was all old and invented.
The account gained traction in part by promoting numerous fake claims. Many of the false tweets and retweets have since been removed without correction.
One of the first allegations made by @YourAnonCentral was that the Minneapolis Police Department was hacked. The account retweeted reports that the officer's emails and passwords were leaked by the hacker collective.
But evidence indicates that isn’t what actually happened. Although several government-run websites in Minneapolis were hit with distributed denial-of-service attacks, an unsophisticated albeit effective tactic used to knock websites offline, claims of a hack are unfounded. Image
Although a hack took place on the Minneapolis Senate website, the initial hack claims that helped @YourAnonCentral gain new prominence were not true. The actual hack, Senate officials said, gave attackers access to a file containing passwords used by politicians and officials.
Analysis of the email addresses and passwords highlighted by @YourAnonCentral show that the content did not originate from the Minneapolis Police Department or any other local government entity.
Troy Hunt, founder of Have, Been Pwned, a free service that notifies users if their credentials show up in data breaches, detailed in a blog post on Monday what was actually contained in the first alleged hack.
It appears someone, according to Hunt, merely searched for Minneapolis government email addresses in old and already public data breaches and compiled them into a new list. Passwords on the list also look to have originated from old breaches as well. Image
That wasn’t the only false claim. The account went on to retweet a now-deleted account alleging that Anonymous had just obtained and released personal information pertaining to President Donald Trump, including his Social Security Number (SSN) and phone number.
While Anonymous did reportedly leak Trump’s alleged SSN, the incident took place in 2016 prior to his presidency. The cellphone number had also already been published by Gawker in 2015, leading Trump that year to tweet out the digits as well. Image
The new wave of interest in Anonymous also seems to have caught the attention of scammers. Another Anonymous account that promoted the outdated Trump data, known as @AnonNewz, had actually been a fake K-Pop giveaway account just days prior. Image
As noted by computer security researcher Marcus Hutchins, known online as @MalwareTechBlog, the K-Pop-turned-Anonymous account was able to gain a large following in just hours.
Twitter later told Reuters that it removed @AnonNewz for “spam and coordination with other spammy accounts.”
Another viral claim promoted by @YourAnonCentral was that the decentralized hacking collective had released late convicted pedophile Jeffrey Epstein’s “little black book.” Image
The address book contained the names of numerous high-profile individuals including actor and comedian Chris Tucker, whose name trended on Twitter Sunday.
But once again, the data did not originate from Anonymous. The contents of Epstein’s address book have been public since being published by Gawker in 2015.
Other claims surrounding child abuse were also pushed by @YourAnonCentral. The account claimed that Anonymous had exposed Trump as a child rapist thanks to the leak of court documents surrounding allegations made on behalf of a 13-year-old girl. Image
At least some versions of the document circulating online are legitimate. Trump was, in fact, accused in a lawsuit of raping a young teenage girl. Once again, the documents as well as the allegations are not new and have been public since 2016.
The false claims didn’t stop there. Twitter users even quickly began spreading the rumor that Anonymous had leaked proof that Princess Diana had been murdered by the British Royal Family. Image
In reality, @YourAnonCentral merely tweeted a link to a 2002 article from the Guardian that, unsurprisingly, offered no such proof.
Old tweets from the account also resurfaced, showing @YourAnonCentral making disparaging comments about transgender people. The discovery led many who had initially praised the profile to question the account’s intentions. Image
Given the current political divide and unprecedented situation the United States finds itself in, it’s not surprising that many would want to believe the fantastical claims circulating online, especially if some were artificially inflated.
And when technical topics such as hacking become involved, the line between fact and fiction can blur even further.

As with any information, verification is always needed, even if it originates from an influential account that appears to portray an air of legitimacy.

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