The official account of Twitter founder and CEO Jack Dorsey was hacked, and the hacker offered a set of tweets that included racial insults to more than 4.21 million followers, while the president of the world's most powerful nation hoped the hackers would not reach his account.

Twitter responded with a tweet saying it knew Jack's account had been hacked and was investigating the event.

One tweet claimed that the Nazi leader (Adolf Hitler) was innocent, while other tweets contained racist comments against African Americans and Jews.

The breach occurred at 10:30 pm Mecca time, and lasted for a while before Twitter deleted those tweets, and restored the account to its previous state.

Jack Dorsey's account hacking was not the first to infiltrate an account of a well-known figure.He broke the founder's account and Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg in June 2016, and later in the same month, the account of the president of Google Sundar Pichai was hacked.

The calculation of the President of the United States is not important
The incident shocked Twitter users and wondered what would happen if US President Donald Trump's account was in danger and what kind of damage hackers could do.

White House reporters asked Trump about the possibility on Friday, but Trump seemed indifferent.

The president refused to consider this scenario, saying that "it should not be too bad" if that happened.

"Well, I hope they don't penetrate my account. But, in fact, if they do, they won't know more than I wrote, right? It shouldn't be so bad."

The Trump account has 63.7 million followers and often posts policy tweets. Some wondered what would happen if an intruder took control and began to tweet false information about security threats, political alliances or even war.