In an interview with French news program 13 Heures, TV5Monde reporter David Delos unwittingly revealed at least one password for the station`s social media presence. That`s because he was filmed in front of a staffer`s desk—which was smothered in sticky notes and taped index cards that were covered in account usernames and passwords.
Delos` segment revealed the usernames and passwords for TV5Monde`s Twitter and Instagram accounts, but they were too difficult to read in an archived video of the broadcast. That wasn`t the case for the YouTube information, however; Twitter user pent0thal confirmed that account`s displayed password was `lemotdepassedeyoutube,` which translates in English to `the password of YouTube.`
A cursory glance at TV5Monde`s social media accounts did not reveal any seemingly false or disruptive posts since the passwords were displayed on that French broadcast. However, the same Twitter user found another screengrab of a completely different news segment about TV5Monde`s hacking ordeal—which also contained a post-it note with what appeared to be a staffer`s general-use username and password.
One follow-up theory about the source of TV5Monde`s hacking also hinged on a bad-password issue—namely, that the network`s highest-level password was `azerty12345,` the French-keyboard equivalent of `qwerty12345`—but that theory hinged on a supposed broadcast by Russian TV station NTV, which Ars Technica was unable to confirm ever took place.
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