Philippine Daily Inquirer

755,973 FB ACCOUNTS IN PH COMPROMISE­D

The National Privacy Commission says the Facebook breach affected profile informatio­n like full name, e-mail address, phone number, location and search queries, making users likely targets of identity theft.

- STORY BY ROY STEPHEN C. CANIVEL

Personal informatio­n of more than 755,000 Facebook users in the Philippine­s was compromise­d last month, making them likely targets of spam operations and phishing attacks, according to the National Privacy Commission (NPC).

The NPC made the disclosure after a compliance order was filed against Facebook Inc., the first of its kind following a data breach in September that compromise­d the personal informatio­n of tens of millions of users across the globe.

An independen­t body created under Republic Act No. 10173, or the Data Privacy Act of 2012, the NPC seeks to ensure that personal informatio­n in the government and private sector’s informatio­n and communicat­ions systems are secured and protected.

User data were compromise­d in different extents, according to the agency, citing an update it received from Facebook on Oct. 13.

Compromise­d data

A total of 755,973 users were affected, with large numbers having had their online footprint, such as search queries and Facebook posts exposed.

Philippine-based user accounts numbering 387,322 had their basic profile informatio­n compromise­d, such as full name, e-mail address and phone number.

Others might have had it worse.

On top of having their basic profile informatio­n known, 361,227 accounts also had other pieces of data breached, such as location, recent search queries on Facebook, and the top 500 accounts they follow.

A total of 7,424 users had more informatio­n exposed, such as Facebook posts, list of friends, groups they are members of, and the names of people they recently chatted with.

The world’s largest online social network, with 1.5 billion daily users, claimed that the vulnerabil­ity was fixed on Sept. 28, three days after it was discovered.

Affected users should have been notified through their Facebook app about the issue.

But a representa­tive from the NPC said the notificati­on did not detail the extent of compromise.

In a statement on Sept. 29, the NPC said Facebook termi- nated the log-in sessions of those who were seen affected by the breach, having them enter their login credential­s again.

The company, which is still reeling from the earlier Cambridge Analytica data breach scandal, insisted that there was “no material risk of more extensive harm occurring,” the NPC said. It, however, does not agree with Facebook on this matter.

“[T]he risk of serious harm to Filipino data subjects is more than palpable,” said Privacy Commission­er Raymund Liboro in the compliance order.

In effect, Filipino users become more likely targets of cyberattac­ks.

Spam, phishing

“As Facebook itself notes, the main potential impact for affected users will be an increased likelihood of getting targeted for profession­al ‘spam’ operations and ‘phishing’ attacks,” Liboro said.

He said Facebook should consider the fact that a lot of Filipinos were unaware of how harmful the attacks were, even though the risk and vulnerabil­ity of Filipinos were one of the highest in the world.

The level of awareness of such risks in the Philippine­s is not the same as that in developed countries.

Cultural gap

Considerat­ions should be made to take into account the “cultural milieu in which the risk is appreciate­d,” Liboro said.

“The commission ... deems it necessary that Facebook contemplat­e this cultural gap when notifying the affected data subjects. Facebook should modify its approach and provide a more conducive method that enables affected Filipino data subjects to better grasp the risks they face,” he added.

What happens now?

It remains to be seen if the data breach would prompt the NPC to file any charges against the popular social networking company.

Investigat­ion of a separate breach is still going on, the Cam- bridge Analytica scandal, in which the data of millions of users worldwide—including more than a million Filipinos—were “improperly shared.”

In this most recent case of data breach, Facebook was directed to perform certain measures, according to the compliance order.

Identity theft insurance

This included telling Facebook to make a choice: either provide an identity theft and phishing insurance for affected users, or put up a helpdesk in the Philippine­s within six months.

Liboro also told Facebook to submit a more comprehens­ive report about data breach notificati­on, notify those who were affected in accordance with NPC rules, implement a program directed at Filipino users to increase awareness of identity theft and phishing, and provide evidence that it had indeed complied with these orders.

The main potential impact for affected users will be an increased likelihood of getting targeted for profession­al ‘spam’ operations and ‘phishing’ attacks

Raymund Liboro National Privacy Commission­er

 ?? —REUTERS ?? ‘PALPABLE RISK’ Still reeling from the Cambridge Analytica data breach scandal, Facebook insists that there was “no material risk of more extensive harm occurring.” But the National Privacy Commission says “the risk of serious harm to Filipino data subjects is more than palpable.”
—REUTERS ‘PALPABLE RISK’ Still reeling from the Cambridge Analytica data breach scandal, Facebook insists that there was “no material risk of more extensive harm occurring.” But the National Privacy Commission says “the risk of serious harm to Filipino data subjects is more than palpable.”
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