San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

FACEBOOK DATA ON MORE THAN 500M ACCOUNTS FOUND ONLINE

Personal informatio­n leaked in 2019 was posted Saturday

- BY HANNAH KNOWLES Knowles writes for The Washington Post.

Personal informatio­n on more than 500 million Facebook users — previously leaked and now made more widely available — was shared online Saturday, according to the news site Insider, worrying experts who said the compromise­d data could make people more vulnerable to fraud.

Insider said it reviewed a sample of the leaked phone numbers, birth dates, biographic­al details and more and found that some data matched known Facebook users’ records. The Washington Post has not independen­tly verified the informatio­n. Facebook said the leak involved “old” data stemming from a problem resolved in 2019, but the news still sparked renewed scrutiny of a social media giant previously dogged by highprofil­e concerns about data privacy.

“Bad actors will certainly use the informatio­n for social engineerin­g, scamming, hacking and marketing,” tweeted Alon Gal, the cofounder of an Israeli cybercrime intelligen­ce company called Hudson Rock, who flagged the release of the Facebook data Saturday. Social engineerin­g involves getting access to people’s confidenti­al informatio­n by gaining their trust rather than overcoming technical barriers — for example, by impersonat­ing a tech support person.

“I have yet to see Facebook acknowledg­ing this absolute negligence of your data,” Gal tweeted. Gal said the compromise­d data also included Facebook IDS, full names, locations, some email addresses, relationsh­ip statuses and other details.

Facebook did not immediatel­y respond to questions Saturday evening, but company spokeswoma­n Liz Bourgeois tweeted Saturday that the leak detailed by Insider involved “old data that was previously reported on in 2019.”

“We found and fixed this issue in August 2019,” Bourgeouis wrote.

Insider said a Facebook spokespers­on told the news organizati­on that the data was scraped through a nowfixed vulnerabil­ity.

The breach affected more than 533 million users spanning 106 countries, according to Insider, and includes more than 32 million records for users in the United States.

Gal told The Washington Post that the leaked database was previously sold for tens of thousands of dollars and then circulated, selling for lower prices until it finally was offered at no charge.

Early this year, Gal said, someone built a bot that gave people access to the database for a fee — a developmen­t that made the trove of data “much more worrisome,” Gal tweeted at the time. Motherboar­d reported in January on that peddling of access in a “low-level cybercrimi­nal forum.”

On Saturday a user posted on a forum offering the data free.

The Post messaged the user on the app Telegram and did not immediatel­y hear back.

Facebook — the world’s most popular social media site, with well over 2 billion users — has drawn rebukes before for its handling of people’s data. In 2019, the Federal Trade Commission fined the company $5 billion, alleging that it misled users about how third parties such as advertiser­s were accessing their personal informatio­n. Facebook did not have to admit guilt, but its settlement with the government included what was the largest privacy violation fine in American history.

The FTC began investigat­ing after reports that Cambridge Analytica had improperly accessed names, “likes” and other informatio­n for millions of users without their knowledge.

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