Meta alerts users to mobile apps that steal passwords

A million Facebook users forwarded a warning from Meta on Friday that they had been “exposed” to password-stealing smartphone apps that appeared to be harmless.

David Agranovich, director of the threat disruption, revealed during a briefing that Meta has so far this year identified more than 400 “malicious” apps made for smartphones running Apple or Android software and accessible from the Apple and Google app stores.

In order to trick people into downloading them, these apps were listed on the Google Play Store and Apple’s App Store under false names such as photo editors, games, VPN services, business apps, and other utilities, according to a blog post by Meta.

According to Meta’s security team, the apps frequently request Facebook login information from users in order to access promised features, stealing usernames and passwords in the process.

The apps, according to Agranovich, “are just trying to trick people into entering in their login information in a way that allows hackers to access their accounts.”

We will let a million users know that, while they may not have been compromised, they may have come into contact with these applications.

More than 40% of the apps that Meta listed included tools for editing or manipulating images, and some of them appeared to be as basic as using flashlight apps on smartphones.

Agranovich noted that the developers of the malicious apps are probably after passwords for more than just Facebook accounts when he said, “Our sense is that these types of malicious app developers try to target multiple services.”

FAQ

  • When the warning from meta came?

Ans. On Friday 

  • Who is David Agranovich?

Ans. The director of the threat disruption.

According to Biden, the conflict in Ukraine has increased nuclear risk to its highest point since 1962. Cuban Nuclear Emergency

President of the United States Joe Biden claims that since the 1962 Cuban Missile Crisis, there has never been a greater chance of a nuclear “Armageddon.”

Mr. Biden stated that it was “not joking” for Vladimir Putin to threaten to use tactical nuclear weapons after experiencing setbacks in Ukraine.

The US was “trying to figure out,” he continued, Mr. Putin’s plan for ending the conflict.

The US and the EU have emphasized the significance of taking Mr. Putin’s nuclear saber-rattling seriously in the past.

Despite Moscow’s nuclear hints, the US has not seen any signs that Russia is preparing to use a nuclear weapon in the near future, according to Jake Sullivan, the national security adviser for the US.

 

Despite the four recent illegitimate annexations by Russia, Ukraine has been gaining territory at the expense of Russia.

Russian officials have been warned by US officials that if they run into trouble on the battlefield, they might resort to using WMDs.

President Biden claimed that the Russian leader had made reference to using tactical nuclear, biological, or chemical weapons because “his military is, you might say, significantly underperforming.”

For the first time since the Cuban Missile Crisis, nuclear war may be on the horizon if current trends continue, Vice President Biden warned his fellow Democrats.

“We have not had to deal with the possibility of Armageddon since Kennedy and the Cuban Missile Crisis,” the author writes.

 

FAQ

 

  • Who is the national security adviser for the US?

Ans. Jake Sullivan 

 

  • What was the last nuclear crisis?

Ans. Cuban Missile Crisis 

 

 

A former Uber security chief was convicted of concealing a 2016 data breach from law enforcement

A federal jury found former Uber security chief Joe Sullivan guilty on Wednesday of charges that he failed to notify law enforcement authorities of a breach of driver and customer records.

While the Federal Trade Commission was looking into Uber for a previous online system breach, Sullivan learned of a new breach that had affected the Uber accounts of more than 57 million users, including both drivers and passengers.

Sullivan was found guilty by the jury of one count of obstructing the FTC’s investigation and one count of misprision or acting to hide a crime from law enforcement.

The case, which is thought to be the first instance in which a company executive has been criminally prosecuted due to a hack, could alter how security experts respond to data breaches.

This will have an effect on how responsibilities are allocated. This will have an effect on what has been documented. This will have an effect on how bug bounty programs are created, according to Chinmayi Sharma, a lecturer at the University of Texas at Austin School of Law and a scholar in residence at the Robert Strauss Center for International Security and Law.

In the course of Friday’s trial for Sullivan, the jury of six men and six women deliberated for more than 19 hours before rendering a decision.

Sullivan’s attorney David Angeli said, “While we obviously disagree with the jury’s decision, we appreciate their commitment and effort in this case.” “Throughout his illustrious career and in this incident, Mr. Sullivan’s sole concern has been ensuring the safety of people’s personal data on the internet.”

FAQ

  • Who is the federal jury’s former Uber security chief?

Ans.  Joe Sullivan

  • How many people were affected by the new breach?

Ans. 57 million 

  • Who is Chinmay Sharma?

Ans. A lecturer at the University of Texas at Austin School of Law 

At least 31 people were killed in an attack in Thailand

According to police, a former police officer attacked a preschool child daycare center in Thailand with a gun and a knife and killed at least 31 people.

Following the attack in the northeastern province of Nong Bua Lamphu, a manhunt was started.

According to police, victims include both adults and children.

According to police, the attacker, who also stabbed and shot adults and children, is now on the run. Unknown is the attack’s motivation.

According to reports from Thailand, the officer was recently fired.

According to police, he was last seen operating a white, four-door Toyota pickup truck bearing registration plates from Bangkok.

 

According to a senior police officer in Nong Bua Lamphu province, 23 children were among the victims, according to AFP.

Mass shootings are uncommon in Thailand. In the city of Nakhon Ratchasima in 2020, a soldier injured numerous others while killing 21 people.

 

FAQ

 

  • How many people were killed in Thailand?

Ans. 31 

 

  • Where does this incident take place?

Ans. Nursery in Thailand 

 

  • What is the name of the senior police officer?

Ans. Nong Bua Lamphu 

The Twitter deal with Elon Musk has employees wondering whether they should stay or leave

Most Twitter employees were listening to an hour-long presentation on the social network’s 2023 strategy when word first spread Tuesday morning that Elon Musk was once again interested in buying Twitter Inc. for $44 billion. Internal presenters from the revenue and product teams did not formally address the development or even acknowledge that Musk had rejoined.

They didn’t have to because staff members were closely monitoring the latest development in the saga that has overshadowed their professional lives since April, when the billionaire CEO of Tesla Inc. first agreed to buy the social network for $54.20 per share.

Tweeps, as Twitter’s employees are known, jumped in and shared their thoughts right away on Tuesday morning. One employee’s meme account frequently made fun of people who were just trying to make it through the day without crying. Someone is sick of being humiliated in court, according to a former coworker’s letter.

Even Twitter’s cafeteria sound system in the city’s headquarters joined in. According to a worker, it was playing the Clash song “Should I Stay or Should I Go?”

Many Twitter employees are wondering this now that it seems more likely that Musk will acquire the business. Musk has been trying to violate the agreement for the past three months, disparaging Twitter and its executives and creating confusion and instability at the San Francisco-based company while the two sides are engaged in an expensive legal battle. The board of Twitter understandably supports a sale at $54.20 per share, but many employees have dreaded the idea.

FAQ

  • What was the presentation?

Ans. It was on the social networks 2023 strategy 

  • At what price, Elon Musk wanted to buy Twitter?

Ans. $44 billion 

  • When was that meeting took place?

Ans. On Tuesday