Skip to main content

Facebook accidentally blocks stories regarding security breach

Facebook was hit by yet another security breach on Thursday, a vulnerability that affected as many as 50 million users. If that security scandal wasn’t bad enough, reports suggest Facebook attempted to stop users from sharing certain stories related to the breach.

The issue seems to have affected two stories about the breach; the first is from the Guardian and the second from the Associated Press (AP). The tweet shows a screenshot saying that the story had been blocked due to concerns that it was spam. While this does look bad, recent evidence suggests that this was little more than an unfortunate error on the part of Facebook’s automated spam filters.

Recommended Videos

Other Facebook users reported that they were not having any trouble posting the story. Facebook itself has clarified that this was an issue with the automated moderation system. In short, the story was posted so many times in such a short time period that it accidentally triggered the spam filters.

All in all, this explanation makes more sense than some conspiracy on the part of Facebook. After all, news of this breach has been reported by nearly every tech site and has been picked up by mainstream news outlets. However, it does highlight — yet again — the flaws in Facebook’s algorithms and automated software.

Facebook, like pretty much every other tech company on the planet, relies heavily on A.I. to help manage its site. This isn’t necessarily a bad thing since there’s so much content on Facebook that it would be all but impossible for human moderators to review it all. Unfortunately, the timing of this error could hardly come at a worse time for the social media giant. The company is still facing questions regarding data use by Cambridge Analytica, and these recent security issues are not helping matters.

Eric Brackett
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Virgin Media breach disclosed details about adult content and gambling habits
Stock photo of lock and data

British telecom provider Virgin Media experienced a data breach that allowed unauthorized access to highly personal information about hundreds of customers.

"We recently became aware that one of our marketing databases was incorrectly configured which allowed unauthorized access," Lutz Schüler, CEO of Virgin Media said in a statement. "We immediately solved the issue by shutting down access to this database, which contained some contact details of approximately 900,000 people, including fixed-line customers representing approximately 15% of that customer base. Protecting our customers’ data is a top priority and we sincerely apologize."

Read more
Facebook faces another huge data leak affecting 267 million users
mark zuckerberg speaking in front of giant digital lock

More than 267 million Facebook users’ IDs, phone numbers, and names were exposed to an online database that could potentially be used for spam and phishing campaigns. 

Security researcher Bob Diachenko uncovered the database, according to Comparitech. The database was first indexed on December 4, but as of today, December 19, it is unavailable. Comparitech reports that before the site was taken down, the database was found on a hacker forum as a downloadable file. 

Read more
Facebook will protect your data — as long as no one’s paying them for it
Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg speaking on a panel at the Paley Center for Media

At a Capitol Hill hearing Tuesday — no, not the one with the impeachment and such — Sen. Dick Durbin (D-Illinois) asked Jay Sullivan, Facebook’s product management director for privacy and integrity in Messenger, whether Facebook collected any data from its Messenger Kids app. It was the exact same question, Durbin said, that he had posed to Mark Zuckerberg last year, when he received an answer he deemed unsatisfactory.

“I have significant concerns that the data gathered by this app might be used or sold,” Durbin told Sullivan. “[Zuckerberg] responded, ‘in general, that data is not going to be shared with third parties.’ I said his use of that terms was ‘provocative and worrisome.'” Durbin then asked Sullivan the same question. “Is your answer that there is no information collected via Messenger Kids that is shared by Facebook to any third parties?”

Read more