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Facebook Network Privacy Security Social Networks The Internet

How To See If Your Personal Data Was Stolen In the Recent Facebook Hack (recode.net) 36

An anonymous reader quotes a report from Recode: Hackers stole personal data from 29 million Facebook users in a recent hack, including information like phone numbers, emails, gender, hometowns and even relationship data. Was your data stolen? (Mine was.) There's an easy way to check. Visit this Help Center page on Facebook's website and log in to your account. It will tell you whether or not your data was stolen, and which data in particular. Worth noting, while Facebook's alert says that no "payment card or credit card information" was stolen, Facebook product executive Guy Rosen did say that hackers would have been able to see the last four digits of a user's credit card through this hack. Facebook also says it will reach out to people directly if their data was stolen.
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How To See If Your Personal Data Was Stolen In the Recent Facebook Hack

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  • by Anonymous Coward

    It's fake. All fake. How stupid do you think I am?

  • The personal data was not stolen. It was sold. This is the way of Facebook.
  • by CrimsonAvenger ( 580665 ) on Friday October 12, 2018 @08:33PM (#57469960)

    No Facebook means no Facebook problem....

  • is that you have to log into bookface to see if your account has been "exposed" A couple years of not logging in wasted. Now it's Day 0 again...

    • Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • You don't have to log in, actually. I just visited the page, and it told me I wasn't likely affected, presumably by using a local cookie. I'm pretty sure it's been months since I last logged in.

  • It's not hard. #deletefacebook.

    (twitter, too, but the meme is no good without the hashtag). Why hasn't the terminology morphed into anti-social networking?
  • The data seems to be there if all one has to do is log in to their account and check, so Facebook already knows who's been hacked. Facebook needs to email everyone at their non-Facebook contact point that they've been hacked.
    • by hawguy ( 1600213 )

      Facebook needs to email everyone at their non-Facebook contact point that they've been hacked.

      Why? What is the average person going to do with this information? Would they even care? I asked my sister and my teenage nephew about it... my sister said: "Oh well, my information is already out there, so what if it's out again?". My nephew said "Didn't you notice that I haven't logged on to facebook in like 2 years?"

      I don't even know what I'd do with that information - I wouldn't do anything differently whether someone stole my Facebook data or not.

  • About two weeks ago I deleted my FB account. To be able to see if my data, which was proven long ago that FB keeps approximately forever, was stolen I need a FB account. What now?

    I ended up checking if the email adress I used was powned at haveIbeenpwned.com.

  • I never had a FB account but I have no doubt that over the years they have stolen/scrapped info about me (remember "shadow accounts"?). How do I check what info about me have they leaked?

    It's a rhetorical question. I will assume that "all of it" is the answer and act accordingly. I can see how a "leak" can be used as a ploy to attract more reluctant users.

An authority is a person who can tell you more about something than you really care to know.

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