Facebook says employees had access to millions of Instagram passwords [www.cnbc.com]
Millions of Instagram users had their passwords exposed [qz.com]
Facebook now says its password leak affected ‘millions’ of Instagram users [techcrunch.com]
Instagram passwords leak, be sure to change yours [9to5mac.com]
Facebook Confirms Millions of Instagram Passwords Were Stored in Plain Text [www.macrumors.com]
Facebook boosts estimate of Instagrammers affected by password incident [seekingalpha.com]
Poll: Facebook Harvests Email Contacts for 1.5M Users - Is Enough, Enough? [threatpost.com]
Facebook copied email contacts of 1.5 million users [www.bbc.com]
Facebook says it may have 'unintentionally uploaded' up to 1.5M users' email contacts [thehill.com]
Facebook stored millions of Instagram passwords unprotected [www.axios.com]
Facebook stored millions of Instagram passwords unencrypted [www.recode.net]
Who's using Mueller Report Day to bury bad news? If you guessed Facebook, you're right: Millions more passwords stored in plaintext [www.theregister.co.uk]
‘Millions of Instagram users’ passwords were left unencrypted [www.businessinsider.com]
Facebook really doesn't seem to understand privacy or security [www.cnet.com]
Facebook waited until the Mueller report dropped to tell us millions of Instagram passwords were exposedhttps://t.co/tGCUA5QZZC
— Mike Murphy (@mcwm) April 18, 2019
Facebook waited until the Mueller report dropped to tell us millions of Instagram passwords were exposed https://t.co/cmEs1gl9FC
— Quartz (@qz) April 18, 2019
Breaking: Facebook has confirmed it inadvertently stored "millions" of Instagram user passwords in plaintext. https://t.co/c8iF6cBV37
— Zack Whittaker (@zackwhittaker) April 18, 2019
Facebook ?♂️ https://t.co/hasjcaFDc6
— Matt Navarra (@MattNavarra) April 18, 2019
$FB
— Open Outcrier (@OpenOutcrier) April 18, 2019
Facebook now says its password leak affected ‘millions’ of Instagram users - TChttps://t.co/0YT5FdOlNd
Incredible: While the Muller report was being released, Facebook updates an old press post titled “Keeping Passwords Secure” with the new disclosure that millions of Instagram account passwords were internally stored in readable plaintext. https://t.co/BiDfq1G8N3
— Alex Heath (@alexeheath) April 18, 2019
Hang on: How do you unintentionally add code that asks for an email password, unintentionally add code that logs on and scans the user's contacts, unintentionally rolls that up to prod and unintentionally uploads all that data? ? https://t.co/MR430EyoZV
— Mat Velloso (@matvelloso) April 18, 2019
Facebook went with the ol' update-a-month-old-blog-post-with-new-bad-info-on-a-crazy-news-day technique. It's a bold strategy, Cotton.https://t.co/KcFCqsWKtL pic.twitter.com/3kg82MA76y
— Ryan Mac (@RMac18) April 18, 2019
INSERT “We have a responsibility to protect your data, and if we can't then we don't deserve to serve you” JOKE HERE https://t.co/lF1wE8nX3p
— John Paczkowski (@JohnPaczkowski) April 18, 2019
At this point can we even differentiate between instances of this shit? I can’t. It’s all a continuous blur with the vague outline of a pasty face and Elizabeth Holmes eyes https://t.co/3BF29Euouz
— Dobby’s Knobby Gets a Jobbie, Chapter One (@rushmorn) April 18, 2019
It's definitely, definitely a total coincidence that Facebook waited until the #MuellerReport dropped to quietly tell everyone they exposed millions of Instagram passwords. https://t.co/4oGe2Cn2tI
— Alex Whitcomb (@AlexWhitcomb) April 18, 2019
Facebook PR should teach a master class in news dumping https://t.co/7XYaTuPHz6 pic.twitter.com/2oNvdbcr1C
— Seth Fiegerman (@sfiegerman) April 18, 2019
Dear @ftc: is this unfair and deceptive enough for action? https://t.co/NJn0GNr8AM
— Steven Bellovin (@SteveBellovin) April 18, 2019
I concur that this is one of the most legally actionable behaviors by @facebook to date. I'm confident regulators will be taking a look.
— ashkan soltani (@ashk4n) April 18, 2019
Whether it will be included as part of the pending #cambridgeanalytica settlement or started as a new investigation is the question https://t.co/PhuryyroE3
Someone designed that UI. Someone else approved the wording of the request it was making. Someone else had to *test that the data was successfully translated into their system for their use*. Likely many people at all stages. No part of this can have been “unintentional”. https://t.co/b1FBFKX60V
— Dan Curtis Johnson (@dcurtisj) April 18, 2019
If true, this is insane. Password harvesting isn’t something you can “unintentionally” do at scale — roadmap, code, code review, deployment, use of the contacts data, and no one stopped this? https://t.co/DtPPq97X04
— Sarah Guo ⚡️ Greylock (@saranormous) April 18, 2019
“Unintentionally uploaded”. These things will keep happening as long as there is no accountability. https://t.co/nGj8Yl3WJI
— zeynep tufekci (@zeynep) April 18, 2019
It's worth noting that while 1.5 million users' contact books were *directly* harvested, the total number of people whose contact details were obtained may well be in the dozens/hundreds of millions, as people often have hundreds of contacts. https://t.co/s9D0GAOZyw
— Rob Price (@robaeprice) April 18, 2019
The planned notification scheme here is completely inappropriate. All users whose email hase been uploaded by another user should be notified. https://t.co/AeqYi1T40v
— Paul-Olivier Dehaye (@podehaye) April 18, 2019
Earlier this month, news broke that Facebook was asking users to provide their email passwords when they signed up. Turns out it was then using them to grab users’ contact books — without asking permission first. https://t.co/s9D0GAOZyw
— Rob Price (@robaeprice) April 18, 2019
im a huge fan of FB blog post titles when they have bad news to sharehttps://t.co/qqcdB83Ac0 pic.twitter.com/mowPG2Rdh3
— rat king (@MikeIsaac) April 18, 2019
SCOOP: Facebook harvested 1.5 million people’s email contacts without their consent. It says it “unintentionally uploaded” them after asking users for their email passwords. https://t.co/HlqCFQ3smx
— Rob Price (@robaeprice) April 18, 2019
Remember how FB stored tens of millions of user passwords unencrypted on their servers? They just updated the blog to say that "millions of Instagram users" also had their passwords stored unencrypted. They originally said "tens of thousands of IG users" https://t.co/4Vw3sI0U0m
— Kurt Wagner (@KurtWagner8) April 18, 2019
I'm curious to see some actual numbers. Are we talking low millions, or LinkedIn/Yahoo (hundreds of millions)? These quiet low key releases might be announcing historic numbers and we wouldn't know https://t.co/KuflcfThAe
— sarah jeong (@sarahjeong) April 18, 2019
Bloody hell, it really isn’t their day today https://t.co/H7hV9Jy4FR
— Matt Southern (@mattgsouthern) April 18, 2019
It is [ 259 ] days since Facebook had a chief security officer.https://t.co/bMcsLLcA2o
— Zack Whittaker (@zackwhittaker) April 18, 2019
How do you unintentionally write & ship code that asks users for their email password, scans their address book then uploads their contacts to your server without asking permission?
— Dare Obasanjo (@Carnage4Life) April 18, 2019
For Facebook "unintentional" always means "we got caught? aw shucks". ??♂️ https://t.co/Cckgk5jRYM
facebook deciding to dump bad news of more user password compromises ("Millions" of Instagram users, up from "thousands" a month ago) on mueller dayhttps://t.co/43qmutkpop
— rat king (@MikeIsaac) April 18, 2019
It's not an 'accident' if it systematically results in one party (@Facebook) consistently getting access to user data via deceptive means https://t.co/B16sNBWo4f
— ashkan soltani (@ashk4n) April 18, 2019
"unintentionally" is the new "the dog ate my homework" https://t.co/Ya3N0klkQ2
— Miguel de Icaza (@migueldeicaza) April 18, 2019
NOW: https://t.co/XGBfBm131v
— Kontra (@counternotions) April 18, 2019
NEXT: Oops, it was more like 15-150 million people. We will do better.
LATER: That Stamos guy: "People just don't understand how hard this stuff is."
Just throwing this out there... but I’ve been a programmer since 1998... and I’ve never seen code accidentally harvest user data. It usually locks up and crashes when I make a mistake. Instead of say uploading my address book to Facebook.
— Mark Madsen (@idyll_code) April 18, 2019
Strange. https://t.co/4yRLAFAIuy
Oh ffs Facebook ?♂️?♂️?♂️ https://t.co/5VJ5gx4zpJ pic.twitter.com/7ct5WWJgB2
— Amrith Shanbhag (@amrith) April 18, 2019
BBC News - Facebook scraped email contacts of 1.5 million users https://t.co/C0DgJbNyES
— Simon Cocking (@SimonCocking) April 18, 2019
Wink wink....unintentionally....
— #WWG1WGA #Q (@dekdarion) April 18, 2019
Facebook says it may have 'unintentionally uploaded' up to 1.5M users' email contacts https://t.co/ATxNL3IMKI
Facebook said it stored millions of Instagram passwords without proper security.https://t.co/3AficQj5Mi
— Axios (@axios) April 18, 2019
Facebook announced this in an update to a March blog post "Keeping passwords secure" where it first revealed it had not been keeping passwords secure. https://t.co/Dc4rueD2K5
— Ina Fried (@inafried) April 18, 2019
Facebook updates a March blog post to say it stored passwords of millions of Instagram users in plain text, not tens of thousands as first announced (Kurt Wagner/Recode) https://t.co/7c73vLTSzg
— Chris Heilmann (@codepo8) April 18, 2019
Facebook says it stored millions of Instagram passwords unencrypted on its servers https://t.co/RkIoRuXgfd pic.twitter.com/8xUEf4hbia
— Recode (@Recode) April 18, 2019
Facebook stored millions of Instagram passwords unencrypted - Recode https://t.co/fJ5I40RFWs
— lunamoth (@lunamoth) April 18, 2019
페이스북 수백만명의 인스타그램 계정 비밀번호를 암호화하지 않은 상태로 서버에 저장
Dropping bad news during another news cycle just makes you look like you have something to hide. Strong sign that Facebook still does not care about improving its reputation and is more focused on spinning than being a good actor https://t.co/6PH0av6L6q
— Eric Newcomer (@EricNewcomer) April 18, 2019
See also releasing bad news on Friday 5pm (Cambridge Analytica) or before a long weekend.
— Iain Thomson (@iainthomson) April 18, 2019
Who's using Mueller Report Day to bury bad news? If you guessed Facebook, you're right: Millions more passwords stored in plaintext https://t.co/jsBqRjd6Z8 via @theregister
Who's using Mueller Report Day to bury bad news? If you guessed Facebook, you're right: Millions more passwords stored in plaintext https://t.co/45axUu2Ztw via @theregister
— Sean Lyngaas (@snlyngaas) April 18, 2019
Who's using Mueller Report Day to bury bad news? If you guessed Facebook, you're right: Millions more passwords stored in plaintext https://t.co/niAD4xGWzX pic.twitter.com/a4HoehmzNA
— Eric Vanderburg (@evanderburg) April 18, 2019
フェイスブック社、何百万ものインスタグラムのパスワードを同社の従業員はみることができる。https://t.co/yMMM2RswH2
— 藤原直哉 (@naoyafujiwara) April 18, 2019
wow what dicks https://t.co/fexWbSXv2X
— Luke Rudkowski (@Lukewearechange) April 19, 2019
Facebook waited until the Mueller report dropped to tell us millions of Instagram passwords were exposed https://t.co/ma29zmvHg3 via @qz
— Lift Big Eat Big (@LiftBigEatBig) April 19, 2019
Facebook waited until the Mueller report dropped to announce that millions of Instagram users had their passwords exposed https://t.co/Qp2NvCN7FY
— Gavlar (@Gavlar) April 19, 2019
Change passwords...https://t.co/OSS97UAKjo
— Logan (@Logan_RTW) April 19, 2019
Oh.
— James Whatley (@Whatleydude) April 19, 2019
"Facebook waited until the Mueller report dropped to tell us millions of Instagram passwords were exposed" https://t.co/jA5rNkR4D6
Millions of Instagram users had their passwords exposed — Quartz https://t.co/a4QBnDiv5Z
— Crosstalk Solutions (@crosstalksol) April 19, 2019
[chef’s kiss] https://t.co/EzfPJ2iMg9
— shauna (@goldengateblond) April 18, 2019
Millions of Instagram passwords exposed https://t.co/9oCwfShGv0
— Tisci (@TisciFlix) April 19, 2019
Millions of Instagram users had their passwords exposed — Quartz https://t.co/VwtaHjoCF4
— ? TommyJ ? (@ResistMonsters) April 19, 2019
When was the last time you changed your #Instagram password? (via @TechCrunch) https://t.co/WlTdLCzaZA
— Kaspersky Lab (@kaspersky) April 19, 2019
Ugh. #Facebook now says it’s #instagram leak affected millions of users: https://t.co/TFtn8h3yj7
— Oz Sultan (@ozsultan) April 18, 2019
#facebook now says its #password leak affected ‘millions’ of #instagram users #cybersecurity #infosec https://t.co/qCE9UABkK2
— Ronald van der Meer (@ronaldvdmeer) April 19, 2019
......
— kengao (@kengao) April 18, 2019
Facebook Confirms Millions of Instagram Passwords Were Stored in Plain Text https://t.co/SwqCx2tTxl
Facebook Confirms Millions of Instagram Passwords Were Stored in Plain Texthttps://t.co/lDvDymTvjU
— Frank Denis (@jedisct1) April 18, 2019
In the wake of YET ANOTHER #Facebook data issue -- harvesting email contacts without user consent -- will the social network feel any heat? Weigh in here with the @threatpost poll: https://t.co/GF5nGr93W2
— Tara Seals (@wirelesswench) April 18, 2019
You might as well just upload your details to the dark web and be done with being a Facebook data breach victim! Facebook scraped email contacts of 1.5 million users https://t.co/CusVQxODgG
— Martin Hill-Wilson (@martinhw) April 18, 2019
Facebook is just so...bad https://t.co/crarMzXGVU
— Can "John" Duruk (@can) April 18, 2019
You know how some of you switched from Facebook to Instagram because it seemed like less of a risk? Turns out, Facebook stored millions of Instagram passwords unprotected - Axios https://t.co/bBcDQxhTUo
— Todd Breasseale (@TBreassealeDHS) April 18, 2019
Facebook says it stored millions of Instagram passwords unencrypted on its servers: https://t.co/9bxmyaALQK
— Recode (@Recode) April 19, 2019
Facebook says it stored millions of Instagram passwords unencrypted on its servers https://t.co/xLlkyI4rAq via @Recode
— emanuele menietti (@emenietti) April 19, 2019
“Move fast and break things” https://t.co/eRyo5L41DO
— Abhijeet Mukherjee (@abhijeetmk) April 19, 2019
インスタもかよ! https://t.co/Mt7coafVjm
— KENTARO (@_kentaro24) April 19, 2019
Facebook stored millions of Instagram passwords unencrypted https://t.co/N2GZfvPqld
— John Koetsier (@johnkoetsier) April 19, 2019
Of course, because it's Facebook...https://t.co/4esjGjoPkr
— Longhorn (@never_released) April 19, 2019
Well, technically millions is just hundreds of tens of thousands... https://t.co/7XEpAJwzqw
— Daniel Tunkelang (@dtunkelang) April 19, 2019
"A million dollars isn't cool. You know what's cool? A million passwords stored in plaintext." https://t.co/xaF6WuEZvA
— Hung Truong (@hungtruong) April 18, 2019
Who's using Mueller Report Day to bury bad news? If you guessed Facebook, you're right: Millions more passwords stored in plaintext • The Register https://t.co/lnXtPLF6pV
— Ian Cook (@Secnewsbytes) April 19, 2019
Who's using Mueller Report Day to bury bad news? If you guessed Facebook, you're right: Millions more passwords stored in plaintext https://t.co/HanjHxZAj7
— Nicolas Krassas (@Dinosn) April 18, 2019
Facebook using Mueller Report Day to bury more bad news! Millions more passwords stored in plaintext ??♂️ https://t.co/VvGuhj4FFs
— Social Stardom (@socialstardom) April 18, 2019
The Register | Who's using Mueller Report Day to bury bad news? If you guessed Facebook, you're right: Millions... https://t.co/EuAMH6ETmP
— Kimberly (@StopMalvertisin) April 18, 2019