Hundreds of millions of Facebook users’ passwords were stored in plain text, completely searchable by Facebook employees for years.
Some users had their passwords stored in plain text as early as 2012, according to a senior Facebook source who spoke to KrebsOnSecurity. The source, speaking on condition of anonymity, says that somewhere between 200 million and 600 million Facebook users were affected. More than 20,000 Facebook employees would have had access to these plain text passwords.
SEE ALSO: Facebook's News Feed changes were supposed to make us feel good. It's not working.Shortly after KrebsOnSecurity published its story, Facebook posted its own statement by its vice president of engineering, security and privacy, Pedro Canahuati. He states that the company first discovered the issue during “a routine security review in January.”
The users most affected by the security lapse are those who use the social network’s “lower connectivity” client, Facebook Lite. The company estimates that hundreds of millions of Facebook Lite users and tens of millions of “other” Facebook users had their passwords stored in plain text. Tens of thousands of Instagram users also were also affected.
Tens of thousands of Instagram users also were also affected
Facebook claims that no one outside of the company was able to view the passwords and that it has found no evidence that anyone working at the social network “abused or improperly accessed them.” According to KrebsOnSecurity’s source, around 2,000 engineers or developers queried data that contained plain text passwords approximately 9 million times.
“We have fixed these issues and as a precaution we will be notifying everyone whose passwords we have found were stored in this way,” stated Canahuati.
At this point, Facebook is no stranger to security failures. In one recent breach reported in October 2018, personal information of tens of millions of Facebook users were accessedby hackers. Just two months later, the company shared that millions of its users’ photos leakedto third-party developers who never had permission to view them in a completely separate breach.
Facebook is not forcing affected users to change their passwords at this time.
Copyright © 2023 Powered by
Facebook stored passwords in plain text for hundreds of millions of users-啜英咀华网
sitemap
文章
3284
浏览
849
获赞
17277
Dyson's V11 Torque Drive is 20 percent more powerful than Cyclone V10
The future of vacuuming is cordless.A year after halting all new designs of its wired stand-up vacuuSpacecraft watches lonely Earth and moon fade into the distance
Earth is a profoundly isolated rock.The European Space Agency's Hera craft, en route to an asteroid,Webb telescope has answers for an actual question mark in space
Did the cosmos just hand us a meme that encapsulates our feelings about the universe and our place wScientists witness stunning, unprecedented fish carnage in the ocean
On an unassuming morning off the Norwegian coast, millions of small fish called capelin began to gatFitbit has developed a ventilator to help COVID
Just like Dyson and NASA before it, Fitbit has now designed a ventilator in response to the coronaviCouple surprises cross
UPDATE: May 23, 2016, 9:15 a.m. EDTLacey Farris responded to our request for comment.After four yearWebb telescope finds hot young star Vega is actually quite lonely
A little over a decade ago, astronomers found a large gap between two belts circling Vega, hinting tNASA just found unexpected loads of water ice on the moon
Water is the future.NASA, preparing to establish a permanent presence on the moon, has detected depoLinkedIn says its extra intense clipboard snooping in iOS is a bug
LinkedIn's iOS app has taken the ongoing issue of snooping at users' clipboards to whole, new level.Best fitness tracker deal: Save 20% on Fitbit Luxe
Save 20%: Go for a minimalist design with the Fitbit Luxe fitness tracker, down to just $79.95 at AmWhen will SpaceX Starship launch again? Here's what we know.
SpaceX is on track to have the most powerful space-worthy rocket in history, a vehicle soon expectedNASA spacecraft films crazy vortex while flying through sun's atmosphere
The fastest spacecraft in our solar system has captured wild footage inside the sun's atmosphere.NASChina plans to ban Bitcoin mining, report claims
China plans to put an end to cryptocurrency mining in the country, Reuters reported Tuesday citing aYouTube isn't happy you're using ad blockers — and it's doing something about it
Some YouTube users are starting to see a prompt warning them that ad blockers are not allowed on theThe iPhone 16 price hike: Here's the evidence pointing to a pricier next
The iPhone 16 is expected to get a price hike, according to a new report from Nikkei Asia.The cheape