Explorer

Facebook admits to storing millions of passwords on internal server in readable plain text

Facebook on Thursday admitted that millions of passwords were stored in plain text on its internal servers, a security slip that left them readable by the social networking giant's employees.

Facebook on Thursday admitted that millions of passwords were stored in plain text on its internal servers, a security slip that left them readable by the social networking giant's employees. "To be clear, these passwords were never visible to anyone outside of Facebook and we have found no evidence to date that anyone internally abused or improperly accessed them," vice president of engineering, security, and privacy Pedro Canahuati said in a blog post. The blunder was uncovered during a routine security review early this year, according to Canahuati. He said that the Silicon Valley company expected to notify hundreds of millions of Facebook Lite users; tens of millions of other Facebook users, and tens of thousands of Instagram users whose passwords may have be vulnerable to prying eyes. The basic security shortcoming was revealed on the heels of a series of controversies centered on whether Facebook properly safeguards the privacy and data of its users. The basic data defense mistake would also appear contrary to the "Hacker Way" mantra that Facebook co-founder Mark Zuckerberg has espoused at the social network. "One Hacker Way" is the main address of Facebook's vast campus in the California city of Menlo Park. Brian Krebs of security news website KrebsOnSecurity.com cited an unnamed Facebook source as saying the internal investigation had so far indicated that as many as 600 million users of the social network had account passwords stored in plain text files searchable by more than 20,000 employees. The exact number had yet to be determined, but archives with unencrypted user passwords were found dating back to the year 2012, according to Krebs. "We have fixed these issues and as a precaution we will be notifying everyone whose passwords we have found were stored in this way," Canahuati said.

Top Headlines

Not 63 But Over 200 Protesters Killed In Ongoing Iran Protests, Claims Tehran Doctor
Not 63 But Over 200 Protesters Killed In Ongoing Iran Protests, Claims Tehran Doctor
Iran Continues To Remain On Edge As Tehran Defies Internet Ban, Over 62 Dead: Updates
Iran Continues To Remain On Edge As Tehran Defies Internet Ban, Over 62 Dead: Updates
Pak PM Thanked Me For Saving 'Million Lives': Trump Reiterates Claim Of Averting India-Pakistan Conflict
Pak PM Thanked Me For Saving 'Million Lives': Trump Reiterates Claim Of Averting India-Pakistan Conflict
Op Sindoor Exposed Pakistan’s Weaknesses, Forced Defence Overhaul: CDS Gen Anil Chauhan
Op Sindoor Exposed Pakistan’s Weaknesses, Forced Defence Overhaul: CDS Gen Anil Chauhan

Videos

Breaking News: Mumbai House Fire Tragedy: Three Killed After Blaze Engulfs Home in Goregaon West
Breaking News: Violent Protests Erupt Across Iran: Clashes, Arson, 62 Dead as Global Concern Grows
Breaking News: Massive Blast in Howrah: Oil Tanker Explodes on Highway, Multiple Vehicles Gutted
Breaking News: TMC vs BJP War Escalates, Supreme Court Move Likely Against Mamata Banerjee
Breaking News: Jaipur Hit-and-Run: Speeding Audi Mows Down 16 People, 1 Dead, 15 Injured

Photo Gallery

25°C
New Delhi
Rain: 100mm
Humidity: 97%
Wind: WNW 47km/h
See Today's Weather
powered by
Accu Weather
Embed widget