On Friday, Facebook announced that 6 million users' email addresses or phone numbers were leaked due to a bug. Even though this bug only impacted 0.5 percent of Facebook's 1.11 billion users, people have become increasingly paranoid about their privacy online since that it was revealed that the NSA is collecting people's Internet and phone data.
Facebook announced the bug by email and in a public post blog post.
Those who downloaded their archives through Facebook's "Download Your
Information" tool may have also inadvertently also received their
friends' email address or phone numbers that were otherwise never meant
to be be public. Since Friday, this Facebook post has garnered over a
thousand comments, many of which demand an apology from Facebook. Other
attempt to connect this Facebook bug to government snooping, even though
the scandals are entirely separate events.
Users are extraordinarily upset that Facebook did not apologize for
leaking this information. In the post, Facebook Security writes that the
company is "upset" and embarrassed" but does not offer an apology.
Rather, Facebook's security team promises that it will "work doubly hard
to make sure nothing like this happens again."
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