| Facebook Left Millions Of Passwords Exposed to the Public By  Corinne Weaver | March 22, 2019 11:37 AM EDT
 
 Between  censorship of conservatives and leaking private data to the world,  social media companies are not really winning the trust and loyalty of  their users. Now Facebook shot itself in the foot by mishandling  millions of passwords.
 
 In a  blog post  put out by Facebook on March 21, Vice President of Engineering, Privacy  and Security Pedro Canahuati explained, “we found that some user  passwords were being stored in a readable format within our internal  data storage systems.” According to  CNBC,  more than 600 million passwords were left exposed, unencrypted, and  available to the public. Tens of thousands of employees were able to  access those passwords.
 
 Facebook announced that it would be alerting both Facebook and  Instagram users who had had their passwords exposed. The company stated  that none of the passwords were viewed by people outside of Facebook. As  of 2018, more than  35,000 people work at Facebook.
 
 Users were advised to change their passwords even though “no  passwords were exposed externally.” Twitter and Github have also  suffered from these bugs in the past, according to  Tech Crunch.
 
 In a  memo published on March 6, Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg claimed that he was ready to focus on more privacy at Facebook.  Foreign governments,  especially the European Union and the United Kingdom, are looking into  regulating Facebook because of all the data and privacy scandals that  have plagued the company in the past year.
 
 In a more egregious breach of privacy, Facebook admitted to giving out  messages of private users for advertising purposes.
 
 reddit.com
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