Now Facebook is allowing anyone to look you up using your security phone number
Now Facebook is
allowing anyone to look you up using your security phone number
And I mean, geez, stuff like this with Facebook just isn’t a surprise anymore, is it? For years social media Big Brother had been pestering its users to secure their account with two-factor authentication (2FA) by prompting them to enter their phone number so they could get a text with a security code login when logging into their account from a new device for the first time.
On the surface, Facebook prompting people to enable 2FA was a good
thing–if you have 2FA enabled it’s much harder for someone who isn’t you to log
in to your account. But this being Facebook, they’re not just going to do
something that is only good for the user, are they?
Last year it came to light that Facebook was using the phone numbers
people submitted to the company solely so they could protect their accounts
with 2FA for targeted advertising. And now, as security researcher and New York Times columnist Zeynep
Tufekci pointed out, Facebook is
allowing anyone to look up a user by their phone number, the same
phone number that was supposed to be for security purposes only.
In response to the growing outrage over Facebook’s latest data misuse
scandal, a company spokesperson told TechCrunch,
“We appreciate the feedback we’ve received about these settings and will take
it into account.”
Sigh. Sure you will.
If users want to try to claw back some of their
privacy from Facebook’s latest data grab, go into the Settings of your Facebook
account, click Privacy, then click “How People Find and Contact You.” Then
click “Who can look you up using the phone number you provided?” and change the
dropdown box from “Everyone” to “Friends.”
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