By Zuko Komisa
One million users have been alerted by Facebook’s parent company Meta that rogue apps may have obtained their login information.
The business claimed in a blog post on Friday that its researchers discovered more than 400 malicious Android and Apple iOS apps this year that were meant to steal the personal Facebook login information of their customers.
A spokesman for Meta, Gabby Curtis, stated that 1 million customers who may have been impacted by the apps are receiving warnings from Meta.
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According to Meta, the apps they discovered were mislabeled as games, photo editors, health and lifestyle apps, and other categories in order to deceive users into downloading them from the Apple App Store and Google Play Store.
A rogue program would frequently request users to “log in with Facebook” before stealing their username.
“This is a highly adversarial space and while our industry peers work to detect and remove malicious software, some of these apps evade detection and make it onto legitimate app stores,” wrote Meta’s Threat Disruption Director David Agranovich, and Malware Discovery and Detection Engineer Ryan Victory.
For many years, Meta’s privacy practices have been under investigation.
Following revelations that political consulting firm Cambridge Analytica had inappropriately obtained the personal information of millions of Facebook users, the Federal Trade Commission approved a $5 billion settlement with Facebook in 2019.
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