Facebook expects one million accounts to be hacked on its platform

Facebook expects one million accounts to be hacked on its platform

According to Sky News Arabia, Facebook claimed that approximately one million members of the social networking site would have been compromised if they had installed one of the numerous fraudulent programmes on their cellphones.
Axios reports that the security team at Meta, which includes Facebook, released a research on this issue, finding that hundreds of websites that seem secure because they alter graphics and other things tempt users into giving them access to their passwords.

According to the survey, there are 355 of these malicious software available on Android-powered smartphones, compared to just 47 for iOS users.
The researchers drew attention to the fact that 40% of these harmful programmes, along with others that were more focused on games and business, also make the claim to offer image-editing services.

According to experts, this intrusion starts when web developers construct harmful programmes and present them in application stores under the guise of necessary and regular services.
When the user downloads the application, he discovers that he must sign up using his Facebook account, and once he does so, the road to information theft is blocked.

Through his Facebook account, the user grants the developers of dangerous programmes access to all of his data stored on the platform when he accepts to register with them.
And if the email address is connected to the Facebook account and its password, the owners of these malicious applications might be able to access other data, such the email.

The director of threat mitigation at Meta, David Agranovich, stated that he was unable to estimate the precise number of users who were likely to have had their passwords taken by rogue apps.
According to a Meta official, there may be about a million customers who are affected by the issue, while Google and Apple both stated that they swiftly removed the malicious apps from their stores.

Google and Apple emphasise that while their staff are eager to examine each licenced programme, the screening procedure is unable to find every vulnerability.
Users are advised by Meta to exercise caution while downloading applications that require them to sign up using their Facebook accounts because doing so could be a gateway for hackers to access their personal data.

Facebook anticipates one million accounts on its platform being compromised.

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