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Why Everyone’s Talking About Sabrina Carpenter’s Leaked Texts

In 2024, Sabrina Carpenter’s official X (formerly Twitter) account was hacked, with scammers using her platform to promote a fake cryptocurrency called “Beoble.” The tweets were quickly deleted, but not before screenshots circulated, causing confusion and concern. Sabrina herself confirmed the breach, stating on her Instagram Stories that her account had indeed been compromised. (source)…

Sabrina Capenter

In 2024, Sabrina Carpenter’s official X (formerly Twitter) account was hacked, with scammers using her platform to promote a fake cryptocurrency called “Beoble.” The tweets were quickly deleted, but not before screenshots circulated, causing confusion and concern.

Sabrina herself confirmed the breach, stating on her Instagram Stories that her account had indeed been compromised. (source)

While the texts themselves were fabricated and part of the hoax, the incident sparked a larger conversation about how easily anyone, even A-list celebrities, can fall victim to cyber threats.

On Reddit, fans weighed in with their own takes. One commenter nailed it: “Rule one of crypto: NEVER CLICK ANY LINKS.” Others shared how they or people they know have experienced similar account hijackings. (source)


Why This Hits Home for Creators and Public Women

This wasn’t just a celebrity moment. It was a reminder that anyone with an audience is a target.

  • They hijacked her brand voice—replacing her own pinned post with theirs.
  • They mimicked trust signals—using her verified name and profile.
  • They monetized her following—driving clicks to malicious links.

If this can happen to a chart-topping pop star with a professional team, it can happen to you.


What You Can Learn (and Do) Today

🔐 1. Use Lockbox-Level Protection

Treat every platform like it holds your future.

  • Use unique passphrases for each account.
  • Enable 2FA with an authenticator app—skip SMS.
  • Consider a password manager to stay organized.

📍 2. Get Proactive with Monitoring

Install platform apps and enable real-time alerts.

  • Review your login activity monthly.
  • Use tools like TweetDeck or X Pro to notice changes fast.
  • Save copies of your pinned posts and bios for reference.

🧾 3. Know What’s Public (and What’s Not)

Many creators don’t realize how much metadata and cloud-stored info is accessible until it’s leaked.

  • Audit your connected apps.
  • Check what has access to your camera roll or DMs.
  • Be cautious about syncing across devices—especially if sharing logins.

📢 4. Communicate Swiftly If It Happens

Your followers trust you—so if something gets compromised:

  • Let them know right away.
  • Contact the platform’s support to report the issue.
  • Remove harmful links and reset all access.

👁‍🗨 Onyx’s Take

What happened to Sabrina wasn’t just an invasion—it was a warning. One tweet, one unauthorized login, one leaked screenshot can undo months of hard work and reputation-building.

That’s why digital identity protection isn’t optional—especially if your business, brand, or influence lives online.

At Onyx, we guide public women in securing every layer of their presence—before anything gets compromised.


💡 Want to Lock Down Your Digital Identity?

Download our free guide:
🔒 “8 Privacy Tips for Women Who Live Their Life Publicly”

📥 Click here to get yours now

Don’t wait until something happens. Get NordVPN and start protecting your privacy today.

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