Facebook Says Bug May Have Exposed Photos on Nearly 7 Million Users

Advertisement
By Associated Press | Updated: 15 December 2018 01:31 IST

Facebook said Friday that a software bug affecting nearly 7 million users may have exposed a broader set of photos to app developers than what those users intended.

Although this doesn't mean the photos were actually seen by anyone, the revelation of the bug offers another reminder of just how much data Facebook has on its 2.27 billion users and how often these sorts of slipups happen.

In a blog post, the company said the bug affected 6.8 million people who granted permission for third-party apps to access the photos. Facebook said the users' photos may have been exposed for 12 days in September and that the bug was fixed.

Advertisement

Generally when people give apps access to their photos, it means only photos posted on their Facebook page. Facebook says the bug potentially gave developers access to other photos, such as those shared on Marketplace or on Facebook Stories. The bug also affected photos that people uploaded to Facebook but chose not to post or could not post for technical reasons.

Advertisement

The problem comes in a year fraught with privacy scandals and other problems for the world's biggest social network.

Revelations that the data-mining firm Cambridge Analytica improperly accessed data from as many as 87 million users led to congressional hearings and changes in what sorts of data Facebook lets outside developers access. In June, a bug affecting privacy settings led some users to post publicly by default regardless of their previous settings. This bug affected as many as 14 million users over several days in May.

Advertisement

On Thursday, to counter the bad rap it's gotten around privacy as of late, Facebook hosted a one-day "pop-up" to talk to users about their settings and whatever else may be on their mind. Chief Privacy Officer Erin Egan was on hand to answer questions. Asked by a reporter what grade she'd give Facebook for its privacy work in the past year, she said "B." By 2019, she said she hopes the improvements will result in an "A."

Privacy experts might call it grade inflation. In any case, the company has its work cut out before it makes the top grade.

Advertisement

With two more weeks left of the year, it's possible there's still time for another privacy kerfuffle at Facebook. While the scandals don't seem to have affected the company's massive user base, growth has slowed. And the company has had to increase how much it spends on privacy and security, which put a dent in its bottom line and in August contributed to a stock price plunge .

 

For the latest tech news and reviews, follow Gadgets 360 on X, Facebook, WhatsApp, Threads and Google News. For the latest videos on gadgets and tech, subscribe to our YouTube channel. If you want to know everything about top influencers, follow our in-house Who'sThat360 on Instagram and YouTube.

Further reading: Facebook
Advertisement

Related Stories

Popular Mobile Brands
  1. Realme GT 8, Realme GT 8 Pro With Ricoh GR Optics Launched: See Price
  2. DeepSeek-OCR Could Change How AI Reads Text From Images
  3. Redmi K90 Pro Max Key Features Revealed Ahead of Launch on October 23
  4. Anthropic's Claude Code Is Now Available as a Web App
  5. OpenAI's AI-Powered Web Browser Is Here: Know What It Can Do
  6. iQOO 15 Launched With Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5, 50-Megapixel Cameras
  1. Samsung Galaxy XR Headset Launching Today: Know Price, Features, and Specifications
  2. Smartwatch Breakthrough Brings GPS Accuracy Down to a Few Centimetres
  3. SpaceX Launches 10,000th Starlink Satellite, Sets New Annual Record
  4. Scientists Discover New Seismic Clue to Predict Mount Etna Eruptions
  5. NASA and ESA Trace Mysterious Lunar Flashes to Meteors and Gas Leaks
  6. Valsala Club Is Streaming Now: Know All About the Malayali Comedy-Drama Movie
  7. Ganoshotru OTT Release: Know When and Where to Watch the Bengali Crime-Thriller Online
  8. Mr Shudai OTT Release: Know When and Where to Watch the Punjabi Horror-Comedy
  9. SpaceX May Miss First Crewed Moon Landing as NASA Reopens Artemis Bid
  10. OpenAI Introduces ChatGPT Atlas, an AI-Powered Web Browser With Agentic Capabilities
Gadgets 360 is available in
Download Our Apps
Available in Hindi
© Copyright Red Pixels Ventures Limited 2025. All rights reserved.