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Seven Social Media Security Snafus

By Ericka Chickowski on 2010-04-25



Sure, social networking sites such as Facebook and Twitter offer channel partners a lot of opportunity to connect with business partners and friends alike. But it also gives the bad guys a chance at some not-so-welcome connections as well. The new technology and lack of security inherent with social media has opened up organizations to a laundry list of new risks. The following are some of the more embarrassing security glitches and privacy gaffes that have gone down in recent memory.

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1: MySpace Banner Malware

In early 2008, the threats posed by social networks were foretold by a malware-laden banner ad that plagued MySpace and infected its users.

2: Mi6 Official Exposed

The new head of Britian's Mi6 espionage agency saw his personal life exposed all over the internet when it was discovered his wife had a Facebook profile that she failed to mark 'private.' There's nothing like swim trunk pictures to give baddies some leverage.

3: Guy Kawasaki Twitter Escapade

When the Titter account owned by Silicon venture capitalist Guy Kawasaki was hijacked by hackers last year, they were able to use it to send Tweets linked to malware to his impressive roster of 140,000 followers.

4: Britney and Barack Hack Attack

Last year, the same French guy hacked the Twitter accounts of two extremes on the American fame spectrum: Britney Spears and President Barack Obama. The weak link in both accounts was an easy-to-guess answer to the 'secret' question posed by the Twitter authentication process.

5: Parliament in Peril

UK Parliament member Michael Fabricant suffered a Facebook hack that not only took over his account, but was then used to attack his Facebook friends as well.

6: Google Stung Over Buzz Privacy Flaws

Google had to wipe egg off its face earlier this year when users revolted over its lax privacy policies for its new Google Buzz social net, which automatically connected users based on how they used other Google Apps.

7: Mobile App Madness

A glitch in the way AT&T's server software worked earlier in the year allowed mobile Facebook users to log into other user accounts until AT&T fixed the flaw.

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