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For Years, Hundreds of Millions of Facebook Users Had Their Account Passwords Stored in Plain Text and Searchable By Thousands of Facebook Employees (krebsonsecurity.com)

Hundreds of millions of Facebook users had their account passwords stored in plain text and searchable by thousands of Facebook employees -- in some cases going back to 2012, KrebsOnSecurity reported Thursday. From the report: Facebook says an ongoing investigation has so far found no indication that employees have abused access to this data. Facebook is probing the causes of a series of security failures in which employees built applications that logged unencrypted password data for Facebook users and stored it in plain text on internal company servers. That's according to a senior Facebook employee who is familiar with the investigation and who spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak to the press. The Facebook source said the investigation so far indicates between 200 million and 600 million Facebook users may have had their account passwords stored in plain text and searchable by more than 20,000 Facebook employees. The source said Facebook is still trying to determine how many passwords were exposed and for how long, but so far the inquiry has uncovered archives with plain text user passwords in them dating back to 2012. Facebook has responded.

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  1. Hey look by DarkRookie2 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Another story on how Facebook doesn't care about privacy.
    The amount of these is insane. Why is this still a company and not been shut down.

    --
    http://progressquest.com/spoltog.php?name=Son+Of+Son+Of+DarkRookie
    1. Re:Hey look by cjjjer · · Score: 4, Interesting

      And a couple of years ago Twitter was storing user passwords in plain text in a log during authentication requests. The number of times I have worked on brownfield projects where the passwords are stored plain text it almost seem like it is the norm. People would be surprised on how often it happens.

  2. Re:Lies by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The incompetence of these people is astonishing.

    Is it incompetence, or a culture of entitled assholes?

    So far, my take on Facebook is it's led by a self-entitled asshole, and that probably permeates the entire company ... we're Facebook, so fuck you, we'll do whatever we want.

    This is a company which tracks you on almost every website unless you block them. Fuck that, I've blocked any of their domains and Zuckerfuck can kiss my ass and then fuck off.

    Everything about Facebook says it is ran by assholes, and by extension staffed by assholes.

    I'm not giving them a pass on incompetence, I think they're pretty much a malicious entity who feels they have the right to any of your data with or without your consent.

  3. Didn't we already know this? by Cajun+Hell · · Score: 4, Interesting

    People who actually see their spam (i.e. don't have fully automated filtering) have known that Facebook stores plaintext passwords, and that their database has been stolen, for quite some time.

    I get about 10-20 (it varies) of the "I infected you with malware when you were jacking off to porn and recorded you jacking off" spams per day, where the spammer tells you an actual password that you used (for credibility when they claim they've compromised your machine), along with the email address that goes with that password. Among those, it's not unusual to see the address and the password that I had used for Facebook. Of course, there are plenty of others (I use a different email address and password for each website) but Facebook is definitely one of them.

    For several months, I'm pretty sure it's been widely known by most email users (or at least the ones who occasionally glance at their spam) that Facebook got caught with their pants down.

    (Or if not all email users who look at their spam knew this, at least it's the subset of us who always remember to install a user-facing camera and also install malware, whenever we're jacking off to porn. Maybe I should stop doing that.)

    --
    "Believe me!" -- Donald Trump
  4. Luckily it doesn't matter by Murdoch5 · · Score: 4, Funny

    Since everyone uses a random password that's different for every single site / service, this doesn't matter. If you're dumb enough to share your passwords between sites and services, then you're an idiot.

  5. This is interesting by roc97007 · · Score: 4, Informative

    For the past several weeks I (along with many other people) have been getting these scam emails saying that my password is a certain word and they're obviously logged into my account because they're sending me email from my own email address. (Which is stupid -- sender address has been trivial to spoof since email was invented, and that was neither the password for my email account nor ever the password to log into my workstation.). The spam then threatens to send all my contacts photos from my webcam (I don't have one) of me, um, enjoying myself to pr0n.

    The password they always say they've captured was my very first facebook password. It's rather unique and I recognized it immediately.

    So this pr0n scam... Is it an outsider scooping cleartext passwords and using them for spam, or is it someone at Facebook running a side business? Inquiring minds want to know.

    --
    Oliver's law of assumed responsibility: If you're seen fixing it, you will be blamed for breaking it.
    1. Re:This is interesting by Nixoloco · · Score: 4, Informative

      These are pretty common these days. It could be facebook, but more likely one of hundreds of other breaches (if you used the same password on another site) when the data gets posted to pastes on the net or "darknet."

      If you're not already doing it, you should check have i been pwned using common usernames/email addresses you've used to see all of the ways your info has been compromised.

      You can sign up to get notified if your info shows up in future breaches.