Avoid putting phone number on Facebook

Anybody can then find your details and location by just typing the number in the FB search bar

August 11, 2015 03:39 pm | Updated November 17, 2021 03:25 am IST - London:

A file photo of a Facebook page is shown on an iPad in this publicity image released to Reuters in Los Angeles. If you put your phone number on your Facebook profile, anybody can then find your details and location by just typing the number in Facebook search bar despite your privacy settings.

A file photo of a Facebook page is shown on an iPad in this publicity image released to Reuters in Los Angeles. If you put your phone number on your Facebook profile, anybody can then find your details and location by just typing the number in Facebook search bar despite your privacy settings.

Beware! If you put your phone number on your Facebook profile, anybody can then find your details and location by just typing the number in Facebook search bar despite your privacy settings — and your details could be misused by cyber criminals.

Reza Moaiandin, technical director of Salt.agency, used a coding script to generate every possible number combination in Britain, U.S. and Canada, Daily Mail reported. He then sent millions of numbers to Facebook’s app-building programme (API) in bulk. In return, he received millions of unobstructed personal profiles.

Harvesting non-private data

“With this security loophole, a person with the right knowledge can harvest the non-private details of the users who allow public access to their phone numbers, enabling the harvester to then use or sell the user details for purposes that the user may not be happy with,” Mr. Moaiandin was quoted as saying by the Daily Mail . Despite notifying Facebook in April, and calling for APIs to be pre-encrypted, the security loophole remains intact, leaving the site’s 1.44 billion users open to hacks.

According to a report last year by the national security division of RAND Corporation — a non-profit global policy think-tank based in the U.S. — pictures, names, phone numbers, education history and locations can be sold on a network of illegal trading sites.

More profitable accounts

Twitter and Facebook accounts are now more profitable than stolen credit cards, according to the RAND report.

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