BBC journalist Nick Robinson says his X account was hacked and used to promote cryptocurrency after he was apparently targeted in an online phishing scam.
The Today programme presenter became locked out of his account on X, previously known as Twitter, on Monday night after he clicked a link in an email he wrongly believed was sent to him by the social media platform.
Robinson, 61, told listeners the hack came days after he was “swamped by critical messages” from supporters of Elon Musk after he had pointed out a statement made by the billionaire owner of X was untrue.
He added that he was still locked out of his account on Tuesday after his passwords were changed, “so anything you read today, it won’t be me”.
The email sent to Robinson was designed to look like it was legitimate, and included a link it said would allow him to review content it claimed had violated X’s policies to stop his account being suspended.
But the email address which sent the email did not end with “@x.com” or “@e.X.com” addresses used by the platform for official communication.
Following Tuesday’s Today programme, Robinson said he had fallen for the scam despite having completed online security courses which highlighted tell-tale signs of phishing emails.
He said: “Why? Because my defences were down – I was tired after a very long day, I was rushing, and the phishing email made me think that if I didn’t act fast I’d be in trouble.
“However, I didn’t just fall for it. I tried repeatedly to use the official authentic X site to deal with the problem I was being alerted to, and only after trying again and again and failing did I think ‘oh sod it, what’s the worst that can happen?’
“Well now I know. I should have thought the opposite – i.e. if this alleged problem is really serious they’ll be in touch again.”
He added: “My main mistake was not to check the email address which made clear it wasn’t X that were contacting me but a hacker. Everything else looked just like the real thing.”
![An email addressed to Nick Robinson with the social media company X's branding at the top states that his account has violated its term of service, and invites him to click a link to review the violating material](https://i0.wp.com/ichef.bbci.co.uk/news/480/cpsprodpb/7512/live/bf1eb170-e867-11ef-bd1b-d536627785f2.png.webp?w=1180&ssl=1)
His Today co-host Amol Rajan raised the hack during Tuesday’s programme, joking that his “very own tech bro, the mighty Nick Robinson, has finally succumbed to the temptations online, and I see overnight, is launching a cryptocurrency”.
“This is the big news in Britain, and what listeners want to know, Nick, is how do they invest?,” he added.
Robinson said his account was being used to make it look like he was launching a cryptocurrency called ‘$Today’ on the Solana blockchain platform.
“So if you read that, it’s complete nonsense, quite entertaining nonsense,” Robinson told the programme.
He added: “But there’s a lesson learned – don’t click on everything you see.”
X has been approached for comment.