Times Colonist

Hackers stole data from 29M Facebook users

- MAE ANDERSON

NEW YORK — Facebook said hackers accessed a wide swath of informatio­n — ranging from emails and phone numbers to more personal details such as sites visited and places checked into — from millions of accounts as part of a security breach the company disclosed two weeks ago.

Twenty-nine million accounts had some form of informatio­n stolen. Originally, Facebook said 50 million accounts were affected, but that it didn’t know if they had been misused.

The news comes at a jittery time ahead of the U.S. midterm elections when Facebook is fighting off misuse of its site on a number of fronts . The company said on Friday there’s no evidence this is related to the midterms.

On Friday Facebook said hackers accessed names, email addresses or phone numbers from these accounts. For 14 million of them, hackers got even more data, such as hometown, birthdate, the past 10 places they checked into or the 15 most recent searches.

An additional one million accounts were affected, but hackers didn’t get any informatio­n from them. Facebook isn’t giving a breakdown of where these users are, but said the breach was “fairly broad.” It plans to send messages to people whose accounts were hacked.

Facebook said third-party apps that use a Facebook login and Facebook apps such as WhatsApp and Instagram were unaffected by the breach.

Facebook said the FBI is investigat­ing, but asked the company not to discuss who might be behind the attack. The company said it hasn’t ruled out the possibilit­y of smaller-scale attacks that used the same vulnerabil­ity.

Facebook has said the attackers gained the ability to “seize control” of those user accounts by stealing digital keys the company uses to keep users logged in. They could do so by exploiting three distinct bugs in Facebook’s code.

The hackers began with a set of accounts they controlled, then used an automated process to access the digital keys for accounts that were “friends” with the accounts they had already compromise­d. That expanded to “friends of friends,” extending their access to about 400,000 accounts, and went on from there to reach 30 million accounts. There is no evidence that the hackers made any posts or took any other activity using the hacked accounts.

The company said it has fixed the bugs and logged out affected users to reset those digital keys.

At the time, CEO Mark Zuckerberg — whose own account was compromise­d — said attackers would have had the ability to view private messages or post on someone’s account, but there’s no sign that they did.

Facebook vice-president Guy Rosen said in a call with reporters on Friday the company hasn’t ruled out the possibilit­y of smaller-scale efforts to exploit the same vulnerabil­ity that the hackers used before it was disabled.

The company has a website its two billion global users can use to check if their accounts have been accessed, and if so, exactly what informatio­n was stolen. It will also provide guidance on how to spot and deal with suspicious emails or texts. Facebook will also send messages directly to those people affected by the hack.

Patrick Moorhead, founder of Moor Insights & Strategy, said the breach appeared similar to identity theft breaches that have occurred at companies, including Yahoo and Target in 2013. “Those personal details could be very easily be used for identity theft to sign up for credit cards, get a loan, get your banking password, etc.,” he said. “Facebook should provide all those customers free credit monitoring to make sure the damage is minimized.”

Thomas Rid of Johns Hopkins University, also said the evidence, particular­ly the size of the breach, seems to point to a criminal motive rather than a sophistica­ted state operation, which usually targets fewer people.

 ??  ?? Facebook said hackers stole names, email addresses or phone numbers from some accounts and searches and places visited from other users.
Facebook said hackers stole names, email addresses or phone numbers from some accounts and searches and places visited from other users.

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