(Credit: Sunlight Labs)
Tweets began appearing that said "Don't Click" followed by a link. Naturally, people clicked. When they did so, a tweet was sent from their account with the same "Don't Click" message and link.
"We patched the "don't click" clickjacking attack 10 minutes ago. Problem should be gone," John Adams, aka Netik, an operations engineer at Twitter, tweeted around 11 a.m. PST.
The clickjacking appeared to be harmless and just propagated itself, according to a post on the Sunlight Labs blog.
The code "creates an iframe of the page, hides it, and when you click that button and you're logged into Twitter, it makes you post that message (even though you don't see it). There's not a bit of JavaScript involved. The only JavaScript on the page is their Google Analytics code," the Sunlight Labs post says.