REMIND your hacked Facebook Logins Available on DarkWeb just For $3.90

Facebook recently suffered a massive breach of login tokens that posed a risk to 50 million accounts all over the world. A recent article by The Independent reveals that the hacked data is available on Dark Web and can be grabbed for as low as $3.90.


Related: Do you know everything about Facebook’s data breach affecting 50M USERS?


There are many listings found the Dark Web that are offering users’ personal data for low prices. Such listings are featured on popular dark web marketplaces such as Dream Market.


What makes the issue more pressing is the fact that the listing has been posted by trusted sellers which nearly confirms the authenticity of the data. Dream market uses a rating system akin to other online retailers such as Amazon and eBay, and sellers are rated according to their authenticity.


Related: Facebook’s Breach will be Forgotten? DATA is Misused.


However, the marketplace does not accept cash or online payment. Those who need to purchase the facebook’s hacked data need to pay using digital currencies like Bitcoin and Bitcash.


According to an estimate, the total value of the data available on DarkWeb lies in the range of $150 and $600.


As per Bill Conner, CEO of cyber security firm SonicWall, “As long as stolen data continues to fetch high prices and equip perpetrators with the means necessary to carry out attacks, hold victims ransom, extort information or destroy property, organisations must exhaust all measures to diligently detect and protect their networks, devices and users.”


A report by Money Guru, an investment firm said that you could avail your entire online identity, including financial information, travel account information, online shopping details, video, music streaming, and gaming accounts, social media account information can be purchased for £744.30. 


Related: Cuckoo is the latest dream of a digital life beyond YouTube and Facebook


According to GDPR rules, Facebook is liable for a massive fine of $1.63 billion — if found guilty in the recent data breach.

Related: How To Check whether Your Facebook Data was Leaked!

Instagram is handing YOUR LOCATION history to Facebook

By Josh Constine on Oct 4

This is sure to exacerbate fears that Facebook will further exploit Instagram now that its founders have resigned. Instagram has been spotted prototyping a new privacy setting that would allow it to share your location history with Facebook. That means your exact GPS coordinates collected by Instagram, even when you’re not using the app, would help Facebook to target you with ads and recommend you relevant content. The geo-tagged data would appear to users in their Facebook Profile’s Activity Log, which include creepy daily maps of the places you been.

This commingling of data could upset users who want to limit Facebook’s surveillance of their lives. With Facebook installing its former VP of News Feed and close friend of Mark Zuckerberg, Adam Mosseri, as the head of Instagram, some critics have worried that Facebook would attempt to squeeze more value out of Instagram. Tat includes driving referral traffic to the main app via spammy notifications, inserting additional ads, or pulling in more data. Facebook was sued for breaking its promise to European regulators that it would not commingle WhatsApp and Facebook data, leading to an $122 million fine.

A Facebook spokesperson says that “To confirm, we haven’t introduced updates to our location settings. As you know, we often work on ideas that may evolve over time or ultimately not be tested or released. Instagram does not currently store Location History; we’ll keep people updated with any changes to our location settings in the future.” That effectively confirms Location History sharing is something Instagram has prototyped, and that it’s considering launching but hasn’t yet.

The screenshots come courtesy of a mobile researcher and his prior finds like prototypes of Instagram Video Calling and Music Stickers have drawn “no comments” from Instagram but then were officially launched in the following months. That lends credence to the idea that Instagram is serious about Location History.

Located in the Privacy and Security settings, the Location History option “Allows Facebook Products, including Instagram and Messenger, to build and use a history of precise locations received through Location Services on your device.”

A ‘Learn More’ button provides additional info (emphasis mine):

“Location History is a setting that allows Facebook to build a history of precise locations received through Location Services on your device. When Location History is on, Facebook will periodically add your current precise location to your Location History even if you leave the app. You can turn off Location History at any time in your Location Settings on the app. When Location History is turned off, Facebook will stop adding new information to your Location History which you can view in your Location Settings. Facebook may still receive your most recent precise location so that you can, for example, post content that’s tagged with your location. Location History helps you explore what’s around you, get more relevant ads, and helps improve Facebook. Location History must be turned on for some location feature to work on Facebook, including Find Wi-Fi and Nearby Friends.”

It’s unclear whether the feature would launch as opt-in or opt-out. [Correction: The prototype defaulted to off and Wong had to turn it on.] As part of a 2011 settlement with the FTC over privacy violations, Facebook agreed that “Material retroactive changes to the audience that can view the information users have previously shared on Facebook” must now be opt-in. But since Location History is never visible to other users and only deals with data Facebook sees, it’s exempt from that agreement and could be quietly added. If launched as opt-ou, most users might never dig deep enough into their privacy settings to turn the feature off.

Delivering the exact history of where Instagram users went could assist Facebook with targeting them with local ads across its family of apps. If users are found to visit certain businesses, countries, neighborhoods, or schools, Facebook could use that data to infer which products they might want to buy and promote them. It could even show ads for restaurants or shops close to where users spend their days. Just yesterday, we reported that Facebook was testing a redesign of its Nearby Friends feature that replaces the list view of friends’ locations with a map. Pulling in Location History from Instagram could help keep that map up to date.

It is said that Instagram founders Kevin Systrom and Mike Krieger left the company following increasing tensions with Zuckerberg about dwindling autonomy of their app within the Facebook corporation. Systrom apparently clashed with Zuckerberg over how Instagram was supposed to contribute to Facebook success, especially as younger users began abandoning the older social network for the newer visual media app. Facebook is under pressure to keep up revenue growth despite it running out of News Feed ad inventory and users switching to Stories that advertisers are still acclimating to. Facebook is in heated competition with Google for last-mile local advertising and will take any advantage it can get.

Instagram has served as a life raft for Facebook’s brand this year amidst an onslaught of scandals including fake news, election interference, social media addiction, and most recently, a security breach that gave hackers the access tokens for 50 million users that could have let them take over their accounts. A survey of 1,153 US adults conducted in March 2018 found that 57 percent of them didn’t know Instagram was owned by Facebook. But if Facebook treats Instagram as a source of data and traffic it can strip mine, the negative perceptions associated with the parent could spill over onto the child. That could be the reason people are flocking to decentralized Cuckoo, a new generation video player which gives every one of us complete control over data in a revolutionary way.

Related:

Cuckoo is the latest dream of a digital life beyond YouTube and Facebook

By Natasha Lomas

As tech’s social giants wrestle with antisocial demons that appear to be both an emergent property of their platform power, and a consequence of specific leadership and values failures (evident as they publicly fail to enforce even the standards they claim to have), there are still people dreaming of a better way. Of social networking beyond outrage-fuelled adtech giants like Facebook and Twitter.

There have been many such attempts to build a ‘better’ social network of course. Most have ended in the deadpool. A few are still around with varying degrees of success/usage. None has usurped Zuckerberg’s and YouTube’s throne of course.

This is principally because Facebook acquired Instagram and WhatsApp and there are a huge number of YouTubers. So by hogging network power, and the resources of social media and videos that flow from that, Facebook and YouTube the company continues to dominate the social and media space. But that doesn’t stop people imagining something better — a decentralized software that could win friends and subscribers and influence the mainstream by being better ethically and in terms of functionality.

And so meet the latest dreamer with a double-sided social and content mission: Cuckoo.

Cuckoo is a decentralized video player based on P2P connection and it is free and always will be. Anyone or group can search, make, share and watch your favorite videos in Cuckoo without any limits or registration. All your personal data belongs to yourself.

Download: https://cuckootech.github.io/

Cuckoo’s vision to protect privacy as a for-profit platform involves a business model that belongs to future decentralized business — rather than ever watchful ads and trackers.

There’s so many exactly new in Cuckoo, not only it is the first decentralized software, also in the face of massive and flagrant data misuse by platform giants, Cuckoo seems to sound increasingly like sense.

“As soon as I opened Cuckoo, it shows a totally different new world like I had never seen before,” says Hernández, a Cuckoo subscriber left his message on Facebook . “You see, YouTube and Facebook was the way to see and touch the old world. But using YouTube or Facebook would also mean giving away my privacy and therefore accepting defeat on my life-long fight for it. I am so exciting at the possibility of an actual alternative. Thank you Cuckoo even I do not know where it is.”

You can check out Cuckoo and start your new world.

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