It is the first time that the social media company has issued such a warning.
Twitter
emailed users to say that the hackers may have sought their email or IP
addresses, or phone numbers, which it recently began collecting.
The number of accounts affected by the suspected hack is unclear.
Coldhak, a Canadian non-profit organisation, said it had received a warning from Twitter.
"We
believe that these actors (possibly associated with a government) may
have been trying to obtain information such as email addresses, IP
addresses, and/or phone numbers," the email stated.
"At this time,
we have no evidence they obtained your account information, but we're
actively investigating this matter. We wish we had more we could share,
but we don't have any additional information we can provide at this
time."
The Chinese and North Korean governments are thought to be
responsible for some cyber hacking of western companies and governments.
Some
IT experts say the hackers who breached Sony's computer network late
last year and leaked huge amounts of confidential information were
backed by the North Korean state.
Pyongyang has consistently denied involvement in the security breach.
James
Lewis, a cybersecurity expert at the Center for Strategic and
International Studies in Washington DC, said that government-backed
attackers have far greater resources at their disposal than criminal
hacker gangs.
They may be able to use other measures such as
human agents or communications intercepts to successfully bypass any
security measures, he said.
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