After many Twitter users received e-mails on Thursday morning asking them to reset the passwords to their Twitter accounts, many suspected that they, or the company, had been hacked.
Not so.
As a security policy, Twitter regularly resets passwords to accounts it believes may have been compromised and sends users an e-mail informing them that they need to create a new passwords. But on Thursdaymorning, a large number of Twitter users took to the platform to complain that they had received the e-mail and worried they had been hacked.
Twitter said it had mistakenly reset passwords for more people than it it intended on Thursday. "We unintentionally reset passwords of a larger number of accounts, beyond those that we believed to have been compromised," the companysaid in a blog post. "We apologize for any inconvenience or confusion this may have caused."