Social Media Accounts Hijacked to Post Indecent Images
UK police urge users to switch on two-factor authentication
Covers how social media can expose personal data, spread scams, enable account takeover, and provide channels for influence or abuse.
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Background for this topic.
Social media comprises online services where people and organizations publish content, communicate, and form networks. The term covers public posts, private messages, groups, live streams, advertising systems, and the APIs and third-party applications that process platform data.
For security teams, these platforms expose identity, relationship, and behavioral information that can support targeted phishing, impersonation, or social engineering. Compromised accounts may be used to distribute malicious links or fraud, while excessive sharing and poorly controlled integrations can expose personal or corporate data. Relevant controls include strong authentication, phishing-resistant account recovery, least-privilege access for connected applications, monitoring for brand and executive impersonation, and clear retention and privacy policies. Public posts and platform telemetry can also provide threat intelligence, but collection and use may be constrained by privacy obligations and applicable data-protection rules.
UK police urge users to switch on two-factor authentication
The seller advertised the data on the Breached Forums site and demanded at least $30,000 for it
Year-long analysis from Norton Labs finds nearly three-quarters of phishing sites imitate Facebook.
Newly discovered malware linked to Vietnamese threat actors targets users through a LinkedIn phishing campaign to steal data and admin privileges for financial gain.
Ducktail targets marketing and HR professionals through LinkedIn to hijack Facebook accounts and run malvertising schemes.
A new phishing campaign codenamed 'Ducktail' is underway, targeting professionals on LinkedIn to take over Facebook business accounts that manage advertising for the company. [...]
And yes, Musk is back in the headlines, denying another affair Twitter is investigating claims that a near-seven-month-old vulnerability in its software has been exploited to obtain the phone numbers and email addresses of a reported 5.4 million users. …