Gawker

Profile logout login
Guy's Frozen Penis Snaps Off in Ian McEwan's New Novel

Guy's Frozen Penis Snaps Off in Ian McEwan's New Novel #literature #ianmcewan

Is Kirstie Alley's New Weight Loss Program a Scientology Scam?

Is Kirstie Alley's New Weight Loss Program a Scientology Scam? #scams #scientology

Reporter Banned from Sean Penn Event for 'Die Screaming of Rectal Cancer' Question

Reporter Banned from Sean Penn Event for 'Die Screaming of Rectal Cancer' Question #videuhoh #seanpenn

Rush Limbaugh: "I Love These Guys At Gawker!"

Rush Limbaugh: "I Love These Guys At Gawker!" #endorsements #rushlimbaugh

<i>Real Housewives of New York</i>:  I'm A Slave For You

Real Housewives of New York: I'm A Slave For You #recaps #realhousewivesofne

Anderson Cooper Publicly Outs Himself Yet Again

Anderson Cooper Publicly Outs Himself Yet Again #glassclosets #andersoncooper

Wyclef Jean Paid His Mistress $105,000 Through His Haiti Charity

Wyclef Jean Paid His Mistress $105,000 Through His Haiti Charity #employeerelations #scandal

Gawker

FAQ. Include # before tag:
#tips, #stalker, #crosstalk, #internalmemos, etc.

San Francisco, 1:41 PM
Sun Mar 14
19 posts in the last 24 hours

Tip your editors:
| AIM

Editor-in-Chief:
Remy Stern |

Contributing Editor:

Valleywag:
Ryan Tate |

Valleywag elsewhere on the Web:
Twitter | Facebook

Valleywags Emeriti:
Nick Denton
Nick Douglas
Owen Thomas

SUBSCRIBE TO GAWKER RSS

New: Breaking news and daily top stories via email
4260 Subscribers


Please confirm your birth date:

Please enter a valid date
Please enter your full birth year
This content is restricted.

Why You Shouldn't Trust Facebook with Your Data: An Employee's Revelations

The abuse of private data by Facebook employees was pretty much inevitable; the simple act of amassing data tends to lead to corruption. What's sad is how lightly the social network reportedly controls its employees.

There's a great interview on TheRumpus.net with an anonymous Facebook employee. Here are some of the things she divulges:

  • As of a few months ago, Facebook records and archives information on whose profile you view. (Apparently this was already publicly known.)
  • Facebook has 200-220 million active users, and more than 300 million total accounts, including disabled accounts and potential fakes.
  • At one point, Facebook staff widely used a "master password" that unlocked access to anyone's account. Use of this password has been "deprecated," i.e. discouraged, implying the password might still exist and work. What was the password? "With upper and lower case, symbols, numbers, all of the above, it spelled out ‘Chuck Norris,' more or less. It was pretty fantastic."
  • The Facebook employee is aware of at least two coworkers being fired for abusing their access to profiles; the employee herself also inappropriately access profiles.
  • Facebook employees can "just query the database" to find your Facebook messages.

The picture that emerges is one of loose internal controls on private data access. Sure, the master password has been replaced by a system in which Facebook staff must log a justification when they view users' private profile data. But the employee said managers aren't "on your ass about it," leaving the door open for situations like this one:

When I first started working there, yes — I used it to view other people's profiles which I didn't have permission to visit. I never manipulated their data in any way; however, I did abuse the profile viewing permission at several initial points when I started at Facebook.

It also sounds like controls are lax on Facebook's backend database:

Your messages are stored in a database, whether deleted or not. So we can just query the database, and easily look at it without every logging into your account. That's what most people don't understand.

It seems safe to assume that if this particular employee obtained unauthorized account data, and knows of two other people who did, the practice has been reasonably widespread at Facebook, recent "crackdown" or not.

Sensitive data hoards inevitably attract attempts at unauthorized access. Whether it's hospital employees peeking at celebrity medical records or federal workers abusing their wiretap access 100 times in two tears (dubiously claiming it was an "accident"), people confronted with a pile of information feel compelled to start digging.

The best protection for a user: Throw as little as possible onto the pile.

(Pic: Facebook office by Matthew McDonald)


Send an email to Ryan Tate, the author of this post, at ryan@gawker.com.


Upload an image | Add an image URL ×
×
×
Choose a file to upload:
×
Dsmvwl  Admin  Promote to frontpage Approve user Ban user ×
Loading comments ... -/|\
Earlier discussions Paging in progress... | Other discussions | Show all discussions | Show featured discussions only | Expand all replies Collapse all replies
Start a new discussion
By Ryan Tate
Email this
Jan 11, 2010 02:34 PM 776 new visitors136,264 169
Edit » Set to Draft » Invite » Syndicate »

Syndicate this post


Site:
Mode:

sending request
cancel
more about #facebook
Did Facebook Founder Mark Zuckerberg Break Electronic Privacy Laws?
Facebook Vs. Britain's Most Fearsome Tabloid
Mark Zuckerberg Will Personally Hack Your Facebook Account
read more: #yourprivacyisanillusion, #facebook, #socialnetworks, #valleywag, #top, #lifehacker
 
  • Archives
  • About
  • Advertising
  • Legal
  • Help
  • Report a Bug
  • FAQ
Original material is licensed under a Creative Commons License permitting non-commercial sharing with attribution.

Login

Enter your username and password.

Please enter a username.
Please enter your password.
logging in
Login via Facebook | Sign Up | Forgot Password?

Reset Password

Please enter your email address to have your password reset.

Please enter your email address.
Please enter a valid email address.
requesting password reset

Register

Registering will give you a user profile and the ability to add other users as friends. To become a commenter, however, you need to audition.

Want to know more? Consult the Comment FAQ and legal terms.

Please enter a username.
Please enter a password.
Please confirm your password.
Passwords are not identical.
Please enter a valid email address.
registration sent, waiting for reply

Submit Your Comment

You don't need to login to comment. Just enter your email address below.

See how your address will be displayed in the Comment FAQ.

Please enter a valid email address.
Please enter a valid email address.
logging in

Login with your Facebook or Gawker account.

Sign up here.



Send An Invitation

To invite commenters to this page, paste in a list of comma-separated email addresses, and then select send invites.

Please enter at least one email address.
Please use valid email addresses.
Please use unique email addresses.
Please enter fewer addresses.
requesting invites

Send a link

Send a link to this post 'Why You Shouldn't Trust Facebook with Your Data: An Employee's Revelations' via email:

Please enter your name.
Please enter your email address.
Please enter a valid email address.
Please enter your recipient's email address.
Please enter a valid email address.
Please enter your message.
Sending message