- Home
- Technology
- News
Elon Musk blames X outage on cyberattack
Musk said the cyberattack came from IP addresses originating in Ukraine area


Social media platform X went down intermittently on Monday, with owner Elon Musk blaming an unusually powerful cyberattack.
“We get attacked every day, but this was done with a lot of resources. Either a large, coordinated group and/or a country is involved,” Musk said in a post on X earlier Monday.
He did not clarify exactly what he meant by ‘a lot of resources’ and his comments drew skepticism from cybersecurity specialists, who pointed out that attacks of this nature — called denials of service — have repeatedly been executed by small groups or individuals.
X faced intermittent outages, according to Downdetector, restricting 39,021 users in the US from accessing the platform at its peak at 10 am. By 5:00pm, there were reports of the service being down for roughly 1,500 users.
A source in the internet infrastructure industry said X had been hit by several waves of denial of service beginning around 9:45 UTC. The source spoke on the condition of anonymity as the person was not authorized to speak publicly on the matter.
Denial of service works by overwhelming targeted websites with rogue traffic. Such attacks are not necessarily sophisticated but they can cause significant disruption.
Musk later said in an interview with Fox Business Network's Larry Kudlow the cyberattack came from IP addresses originating in the Ukraine area.
The industry source disputed Musk's account, saying that large chunks of the rogue traffic bombarding X could be traced back to IP addresses in the United States, Vietnam, Brazil, and other countries and that the amount of rogue traffic coming directly from Ukraine was ‘insignificant’.
In any case, denial-of-service attacks are notoriously hard to trace back to their authors, and the IP addresses involved rarely provide any meaningful insight into who was behind them.
Musk has joined US President Donald Trump, whom he serves as an adviser, in criticizing Ukraine's continued efforts to fight off a Russian invasion. Musk said on Sunday that Ukraine's front line ‘would collapse’ without his Starlink satellite communications service, though he said he would not cut off Ukraine's access to it.
SOURCE: REUTERS

YDA continues strike against proposed privatization of public hospitals
- a day ago

Millions lost as 12 PU faculty skip return after PhD
- a day ago
.jpg&w=3840&q=75)
PM Shehbaz highlights trillion-dollar mineral potential at investment forum
- a day ago
Minister Khalil Das Kohistani escapes unhurt in attack on convoy in Thatta
- 21 hours ago
WhatsApp adds media & links tab for channels to make browsing easier
- a day ago
Karachi gets a cleaner look: SSWMB puts up civic signage at key entry points
- 21 hours ago

Heatwave alert issued for Karachi as temperatures set to soar
- a day ago

Hania Aamir’s Indian Punjabi film role will win hearts: Nasir Chinyoti
- a day ago

Sri Lanka church targeted in shooting days before Easter bombings anniversary
- a day ago
Zalmi win toss, bat first in crucial game against Sultans
- 21 hours ago

Silicon Valley got Trump completely wrong
- 2 hours ago

Senator recommends compensation for hailstorm-damaged vehicles
- a day ago