MY FACEBOOK ACCOUNT GOT HACKED! RECOVER YOUR ACCOUNT AND PROTECT YOURSELF.
A reader recently e-mailed me with a detailed query
about an apparent Facebook hack. She clicked a link on a familiar
message board that launched a video. She was surprised to find that her
Facebook photo appeared on the page with the video. She logged out and
changed her Facebook password. Facebook support informed her that her
account had been accessed from a location that's home to a person who
has a grudge against her. Her question was, how could this person have
hacked her account, and will her new Norton Internet Security 2011 software prevent future hacking.
Facebook-resident Malware
Unfortunately, there are many ways to lose control of your Facebook account. Simple clickjacking attacks
can hijack your "Like" ability, driving up stats for specific pages.
That's not so bad, but you can also get hit by innovative malware that
resides totally on Facebook. With no software installed on your local
system, there's nothing for your local antivirus to detect.
Symantec researchers
demonstrated a reverse-engineered example for me; it was scary. As soon
as their "victim" clicked on the link, their "attacker" had full access
to the account. Don't worry; this all happened on a virtual system.
Social Engineering
Every time you take a quiz, install a Facebook game, or add any app, you
get a screen specifying what permissions the app needs. These
permissions can include almost anything up to and including accessing
your Facebook account even when you're not logged in. If you don't read
these carefully you can wind up giving away your personal information.
There's one more possible suspect; the video. Sometimes when you
launch a video you get a notification that a new or updated codec is
required before you can view the video. This might be true, but quite
often the so-called codec is actually a Trojan. An antivirus should
block this one.
Protect Yourself
Norton Safe Web for Facebook
is bundled with the Norton security products, but anybody can use it
for free. It scans your Facebook page's links and reports any bad ones. BitDefender SafeGo for Facebook
rates your profile privacy and checks for dangerous links. If you're
concerned about dangerous links (and you should be), installing one of
these can definitely help.
Facebook keeps working on security
internally, but they can't stop you from giving away your personal
information in order play a game or take a quiz. A local antivirus won't
prevent that mistake either. In the end it's up to you. Pay attention,
and if an app asks for too much information just don't install it.
Thanks Cutie :)
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