In an interview with WIRED, Facebook's chief privacy officers argue that the company has turned a corner. Again.
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Author: Lily Hay Newman
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"A few months ago, Facebook disclosed that apps were siphoning data from up to 9.5 million of its users. They only found out thanks to a bug bounty submission" . (February 7, 2020 )"A bad code update allowed anyone to easily reveal which accounts posted to Facebook Pagesincluding celebrities and politiciansfor several hours" . (January 11, 2020 )"CD Projekt Red's list of woes gets longer, as hackers claim to have stolen the source code for their most popular games" . (February 9, 2021 )"The company's explanations have been confusing and inconsistent, but there are finally some answers" . (April 7, 2021 )"To show how browsers can guard against the speculative execution bug, Google security researchers have shown how an attack would work" . (March 12, 2021 )"Just like foods that display health information the package, researchers are exploring a tool that details how connected devices manage data" . (June 9, 2020 )"Better anti-tracking measures have become the norm for Chrome, Firefox, Safari, and other modern browsers. But they still disagree on how exactly they should work" . (January 30, 2020 )"The companys investigation into a Chinese espionage campaign took researchers beyond Facebooks own platforms" . (March 24, 2021 )
Posted on October 22, 2020 December 18, 2022 facebook , mark zuckerberg , privacy , security