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Kenneth Davis
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THOUGHT FOR CONSIDERATION
I don't need to go onto Facebook
and pretend to have friends I've never even met.
To my mind,
that kind of destroys the meaning of the word 'friend.'
I take exception to that.
Because I value and respect friendship.
~Stefanie Powers~

‘This is insane’ – more leaked Facebook data found online Andy Meek -
https://bgr.com/author/andy-meek....This is going to surprise absolutely no
one, but less than a week after word that more than half a billion people had
their personal data leaked from the world’s largest and least-loved social
network, Facebook has apparently gone and done it again. A new Facebook
data leak has been uncovered, this one including user phone numbers that
weren’t part of the initial haul that was first reported this past weekend. That
one, in case you forgot, included such personal information from more than
533 million Facebook users from 106 countries as their phone numbers, email
addresses, birthdays, and full names. On Friday, meanwhile, a Motherboard
investigation found an online tool whereby customers can pay to obtain the
phone numbers of Facebook users who “liked” a page on the social network,
with these phone numbers being separate from the previous data cache noted
above. Motherboard published what seem to be the reactions of some
Facebook users that the publication contacted via this method. “Hello … can
you tell me how you got my number? one of the affected Facebook users asked.
Replied another to Motherboard’s inquiry, “If you have my number, then yes,
it seems the data is accurate.” And still another: “Omg, this is insane.”
This tool is a bot available via Telegram, and it works like this: “Customers”
give the bot a unique ID code for the Facebook page, whose customers they
want to get data from. The bot performs a quick analysis of the Facebook page
and comes back with a price for the “customer.” Say you wanted to extract
phone numbers of Facebook users who’ve liked a band or restaurant’s page.
That would cost a few hundred dollars through this tool, per Motherboard.
Also important to note is the fact that the phone numbers extracted via this
tool don’t show up in the Have I Been Pwned database that includes the
Facebook data from over the weekend. Meaning, this appears to be an all-new
data leak.
Facebook’s explanation for what happened that led to the previous data
leak, we should point out, came days after the fact — and left a bit to be
desired. For example, the company’s official blog post on the matter seemed to
blame users themselves for leaving too much information on their profile set
to “public” (ignoring the fact that Facebook’s byzantine bells and whistles have
changed considerably over the years, and often defaulted settings to “public”
with little warning or explanation). But if you believe that explanation, then
you apparently also believe that the CEO of Facebook must have surely had his
phone number publicly displayed on his Facebook profile, right?
From Insider: Mark Zuckerberg’s phone number appeared among the leaked
data of Facebook users, according to a researcher.
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