Facebook Security Breach: Up To 50m Accounts Attacked
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Facebook has said “almost 50 million” of its users were left exposed by a security flaw.
The company said attackers were able to exploit a vulnerability in a feature known as “View As” to gain control of people's accounts.
The breach was discovered on Tuesday, Facebook said, and it has informed police.
Users that had potentially been affected were prompted to re-log-in on Friday.
The flaw has been fixed, wrote the firm’s head of security, Guy Rosen.
"Since we’ve only just started our investigation, we have yet to determine whether these accounts were misused or any information accessed. We also don’t know who’s behind these attacks or where they’re based. “
He added: "People’s privacy and security is incredibly important, and we’re sorry this happened."
By Suleiman Ugbokhe Pa Akubo Yakubu Esuka, the Ódegbé of Imiegba Imiegba Community, Three Ivie Clan in Etsako East local government area was in a celebration mode on Sunday, December 27, 2020, when the indigenes both home and abroad joined the children of Pa Akubo Yakubu Esuka to celebrate his enthronement as the Ódegbé of Imiegba. Pa. Akubo Yakubu Esuka was born to the family of Mr. Esuka and Madam Ogenikho about 104 years ago in Imiegba. In his quest for a better life, he left his birth place, Imiegba, in 1944, with his maternal uncle, Pa Etsekhumhe Ogweli for Minna where he did manial jobs for some time before he left for Kaduna with a single mission: To join the army. But it turned out to be mission impossible as Pa Akubo was not accepted into the army "for reasons I don't know," he says. "I then proceeded to Kano from Kaduna with the hope of securing a job. I was still not able to get a job." As the saying goes, 'no place like home,' Pa Akubo had ...
Image copyright ESTHER HORVATH Image caption RV Polarstern (left), aided by the Russian icebreaker Akademik Fedorov, has found the right floe German Research Vessel Polarstern has found a location to begin its year-long drift in Arctic sea-ice. The ship, which will head the North Pole's biggest scientific expedition, will settle next to a thick ice floe on the Siberian side of the ocean basin. The precise location is 85 degrees north and 137 degrees east. Hundreds of investigators will use it as a base from which to probe the impacts of climate change at the top of the world. "After a brief but intensive search, we've found our home for the months to come," said expedition leader Prof Markus Rex, from the Alfred Wegener Institute (AWI). "It may not be the perfect floe but it's the best one in this part of the Arctic and offers better working conditions than we could have expected after a warm Arctic summer." Image copyright...
By Suleiman Ugbokhe Mrs Glory Ogbaa filtering pap What Glory at a young age saw an elder doing has now defined her choice of vocation – the art of making pap, also commonly called akamu in the southern part of Nigeria. In the north of the country, it is called kwókwó. The housewife, Glory Steve Ogbaa, in a chat with agricriches.agbelonews.com, says “There was one woman in our compound doing akamu and I observed how she was doing it. That was where the experience came from.” You only need to be where this lady is doing her work of processing akamu singing along to know the degree of passion she brings into it. As early as 5 o'clock in the morning, Mrs Ogbaa is up and about to ensure that akamu is ready for the numerous customers who come mostly in the morning to patronise her. She meets the demand of both small and large quantity buyers, the smallest unit being a fifty Naira (N50.00) mould, while a five-litre plastic container costs two thousand naira (N2,000.00) and ...
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