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regular-article-logo Saturday, 23 November 2024

Parag Agrawal shakes up Twitter's security team

Peiter Zatko, better known as “Mudge”, is no longer at the company

Mike Isaac, Kate Conger San Francisco Published 22.01.22, 02:15 AM
Parag Agrawal, Twitter’s new chief executive, fired the company’s head of security this week.

Parag Agrawal, Twitter’s new chief executive, fired the company’s head of security this week. File Picture

Twitter shook up the top ranks of its security team this week with the termination of the head of security and the exit of the chief information security officer, the company told employees on Wednesday, as its new chief executive reorganises the social media service.

Peiter Zatko, the head of security who is better known within the security community as “Mudge”, is no longer at the company, Twitter confirmed. Rinki Sethi, the chief information security officer, will depart in the coming weeks.

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The changes follow “an assessment of how the organisation was being led and the impact on top priority work”, according to a memo from Parag Agrawal, Twitter’s chief executive, that was sent to

employees on Wednesday and obtained by The New York Times. Agrawal said the “nature of this situation” limited what he was allowed to share with employees. Sethi and Zatko did not respond to requests for comment.

Agrawal, who was appointed Twitter’s chief executive in November, has shuffled the company’s executives since taking over from Jack Dorsey, a founder.

In December, Agrawal reorganised the leadership team and dismissed Dantley Davis, the chief design officer, and Michael Montano, the head of engineering.

Zatko and Sethi joined Twitter in late 2020. He is a well-known hacker and has had a long career in government and private industry. Before taking on his role at Twitter, he held roles at DARPA, Google and Stripe.

He began his cybersecurity career in the 1990s, when he was a member of the hacking group Cult of the Dead Cow. He was recruited to Twitter after teenagers compromised the company’s systems in July 2020.

New York Times News Service

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