Security lapse exposes Facebook photos
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A SECURITY lapse made it possible for unwelcome strangers to peruse personal photos posted on Facebook’s popular online hangout, circumventing a recent upgrade to the website’s retirement controls.
The Associated Press verified the loophole hind receiving a gift from a Byron Ng, a Vancouver, Canada computer technician.
Mr Ng began looking in opposition to security weaknesses last week after Facebook unveiled greater degree of ways for 67 million members to restrict access to their personal profiles.
But the added protections weren’t enough to prevent Mr Ng from pulling up the most latter pictures posted by Facebook members and their friends, even if the privacy settings were set to restrict the audience to a select few.
After being alerted Monday afternoon, Facebook spokeswoman Brandee Barker said the party fixed the bug within an hour.
"We take privacy very seriously and continue to make enhancements to the site," she reported.
The latest lapse serves as another reminder of the perils of sharing sensitive photos and personal knowledge online, even when web sites pledge to shield the information from prying eyes.
Before the fix, Mr Ng’s computer-coding trick enabled him to find private pictures of Paris Hilton at the Emmy awards and of her brother Barron Nicholas drinking a beer with friends and photos of many other people who hadn’t granted access to Mr Ng.
Using Mr Ng’s template, an AP reporter was able to look up random people on Facebook and see the most recent pictures posted on their personal profiles even if the photos were supposed to be invisible to strangers.
The revealed snapshots showed Italian vacations, office gatherings, holiday parties and college students on spring break. The AP also was able to click through a personal photo album that Facebook co-founder Mark Zuckerberg posted in November 2005.
Some members of social networks like Facebook post photos of themselves or others in potentially embarrassing or compromising situations that include illegal drug use or underage drinking that can cause molest at school or work. None of the photos reviewed by the AP appeared to fall into this universal aspect.
Despite the risks, more people than ever - especially teenagers and young adults - are publishing personal photos and other intimate details about their lives on the internet.
MySpace.com, the only online conversable network larger than Facebook, suffered a security breach that exposed its members’ private photos earlier this year.
AP
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