A 17-year-old Minecraft scammer just pulled off the biggest social media security breach in history. Graham Clark went from stealing virtual diamonds to hacking 130 Twitter accounts and walking away with $16.5 million in Bitcoin. In this episode, Daniel Torres breaks down how gaming cons became the blueprint for real-world cybercrime.
šÆ What You'll Discover:
⢠How Clark's Minecraft scamming operation taught him the social engineering skills that cracked Twitter's security
⢠The exact 4-hour window when he controlled accounts belonging to Elon Musk, Barack Obama, and Joe Biden
⢠Why SIM swapping attacks jumped 400% between 2018-2020 and how teenagers are leading the charge
⢠The shocking security gaps that let a high school kid bypass Twitter's internal systems
š¤ Perfect for: anyone who thinks cybercrime is just about coding skills and wants to understand how psychological manipulation actually works.
š Chapters:
[00:00] Daniel Torres reveals how Minecraft taught a teen to hack Twitter
[02:15] Graham Clark's gaming scam empire and early victims
[04:45] The social engineering playbook that fooled Twitter employees
[07:30] Inside the 4-hour Bitcoin heist that shocked Silicon Valley
[09:45] Why teenage hackers are outpacing corporate security teams
[11:30] What this means for your personal cybersecurity today
The craziest part? Clark's Minecraft cons were basically practice runs for manipulating real people out of real money. This isn't about technical hacking skills. It's about understanding human psychology and exploiting trust at scale.
š Never miss an episode:
Follow Proof Positive on Spotify or Apple Podcasts and turn on notifications. New episodes drop daily with Daniel's investigative deep dives into the stories that don't add up.
š Topics: Twitter hack, Graham Clark, cryptocurrency scams, social engineering, cybersecurity
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Keywords: evidence based, historical conspiracies, surveillance state, alternative history, geopolitics, current events analysis
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