CALIFORNIA: Facebook Inc said on Friday attackers stole names and contact details of 29 million users in the mass security breach disclosed by the social media network late last month. The breach, Facebook’s worst ever, has exacerbated concerns among users, lawmakers and investors that the company is not doing enough to safeguard data, particularly in the wake of the Cambridge Analytica data scandal.
Still, hackers neither accessed personal messages nor financial data and did not use Facebook logins to access other websites, all of which would have been a cause for greater concern. Facebook originally had said in late September hackers stole digital login codes to take over nearly 50 million user accounts. On Friday, the company revealed that stolen data on 14 million users included birth dates, employers, education and lists of friends. For 15 million users, it was restricted to just name and contact details.
All of those could help a fraudster pose as Facebook, the employer or a friend. They could then craft a more sophisticated email aimed at tricking users into providing login information on a fake page or into clicking on an attachment that would infect their computers. Facebook said it will send customized messages in the coming days to affected users to explain what information the attackers accessed and how they can protect themselves, including from suspicious emails, text messages or calls. A company executive said on a conference call that Facebook will not provide country-by-country breakdowns of the affected users.
Russia has said from the outset that it believes Ukraine was linked to the attack
The bill would give mentally competent adults who have been diagnosed with a terminal condition
Leftist opposition parties submitted a censure motion against the conservative government this week
The ministry alleged that the driver lost control and collided with barriers on the bridge
Republican Speaker Mike Johnson has held up a bill for months that would supply $60 billion in military and financial...
The results are likely to be shaped in part by economic woes driven by rampant inflation