Sunday, December 3, 2023

Here is How to Find that Your Facebook Account Affected With Recent Massive Facebook Hack

Facebook announced a massive security breach on September 28, 2018, initially it was said more than 50 million accounts access tokens was stolen by exploiting the software vulnerability in “View As” feature between July 2017 and September 2018.

Now after further investigation, Facebook now announced that attackers have stolen 29 million Facebook accounts.

The bug was discovered on September 25, 2018, and the attackers have exploited a vulnerability caused by the complex interaction of three bugs in our system to obtain access tokens.

15 million people – name and contact details (phone number, email, or both, depending on what people had on their profiles).

14 million people – the same two sets of information, as well as other details people had on their profiles. This included username, gender, locale/language, relationship status, religion, hometown, self-reported current city, birth date, device types used to access Facebook, education, work, the last 10 places they checked into or were tagged in, website, people or Pages they follow, and the 15 most recent searches.

Facebook Account Affected

Now you can check that your Facebook account affected by this security issue. Facebook set up a page to check that your account was compromised by the security breach, you can visit the page to check the status.

“Based on what we’ve learned so far, your Facebook account has not been impacted by this security incident. If we find more Facebook accounts were impacted, we will reset their access tokens and notify those accounts.”

If you got this message then nothing to worry, if you account affected then Facebook tell you what kind of details the hackers stole.

Changing the password is not a fix, because the passwords are not compromised. Now as the hackers having your personal data you should carefully handle the spam calls, Email, and messages. The Risk of spear-phishing attacks may on the rise.

Last week Google announced Google+ shut down following the security breach that exposed 500,000 Google+ accounts. The bug allows third-party developers to access user’s name, email address, occupation, gender, and age.

Website

Latest articles

Active Attacks Targeting Google Chrome & ownCloud Flaws: CISA Warns

The CISA announced two known exploited vulnerabilities active attacks targeting Google Chrome & own...

Cactus Ransomware Exploiting Qlik Sense code execution Vulnerability

A new Cactus Ransomware was exploited in the code execution vulnerability to Qlik Sense...

Hackers Bypass Antivirus with ScrubCrypt Tool to Install RedLine Malware

The ScrubCrypt obfuscation tool has been discovered to be utilized in attacks to disseminate the RedLine Stealer...

Hotel’s Booking.com Hacked Logins Let Attacker Steal Guest Credit Cards

According to a recent report by Secureworks, a well-planned and advanced phishing attack was...

Critical Zoom Vulnerability Let Attackers Take Over Meetings

Zoom, the most widely used video conferencing platform has been discovered with a critical...

Hackers Using Weaponized Invoice to Deliver LUMMA Malware

Hackers use weaponized invoices to exploit trust in financial transactions, embedding malware or malicious...

US-Seized Crypto Currency Mixer Used by North Korean Lazarus Hackers

The U.S. Treasury Department sanctioned the famous cryptocurrency mixer Sinbad after it was claimed...

API Attack Simulation Webinar

Live API Attack Simulation

In the upcoming webinar, Karthik Krishnamoorthy, CTO and Vivek Gopalan, VP of Products at Indusface demonstrate how APIs could be hacked.The session will cover:an exploit of OWASP API Top 10 vulnerability, a brute force account take-over (ATO) attack on API, a DDoS attack on an API, how a WAAP could bolster security over an API gateway

Related Articles