Later that day, Malaysia’s Minister of Foreign Affairs Saifuddin Abdullah also announced on Twitter that his personal Telegram account was also taken over. He explained that the hackers abused his name and picture, similarly telling people to ignore any messages from his Telegram and report to the authorities. The story doesn’t stop there as today, the head of government revealed that his Signal account was also compromised. If you aren’t familiar, Signal is another messaging app which is widely considered to be highly secure, although both Signal and Telegram deploy end-to-end encryption. Ismail said that the perpetrators were believed to have used the accounts for scams and reminded everyone to not fall for any messages using his name. He has since lodged a police report on the matter. As of now, it is unknown who were the parties responsible or what method was used to access the accounts of the two government officials.
— Telegram Messenger (@telegram) August 9, 2022 In response to the incident, Telegram actually posted a reply on Twitter saying that the Prime Minister has managed to successfully recover his account. The company did not mention if Saifuddin has recovered his account yet, but it did offer its assistance to the foreign minister. In both replies, Telegram added a general reminder to turn on two-factor authentication for added security. Of course, this isn’t the first time that Malaysian officials have gotten hacked. Last year, former education minister Mahdzir Khalid had his WhatsApp compromised, but it only resulted in joke messages being sent. Even the social media pages of government bodies aren’t tamper-proof, as seen last November when the Malaysian Army’s Twitter profile was taken over by SHIB coin trolls. (Sources: Ismail Sabri [1][2], Saifuddin Abdullah)