Facebook founder Zuckerberg hacked to highlight bug
By
Joe Miller BBC News
A
screenshot of the message left on Mark Zuckerberg's wall
A
Palestinian programmer has highlighted a flaw in Facebook's security
system by posting a message on Mark Zuckerberg's private page.
Khalil
Shreateh used a vulnerability he discovered to hack the account of
the Facebook founder and raise the alarm.
Mr
Shreateh said he had tried to use Facebook's White Hat scheme, which
offers a monetary reward for reporting vulnerabilities, but had been
ignored.
Facebook
said it had fixed the fault but would not be paying Mr Shreateh.
Mr
Shreateh found a security breach that allowed Facebook users to post
messages on the private "walls" of people who had not
approved them as "friends", overriding the site's privacy
features.
'Not
a bug'
He
wrote to Facebook's White Hat team to warn them of the glitch,
providing basic details of his discovery.
After
a short exchange with the team, Mr Shreateh received an email saying:
"I am sorry this is not a bug".
Following
this rebuttal, Mr Shreateh exploited the bug to post a message on Mr
Zuckerberg's page.
In
the post, Mr Shreateh, whose first language is Arabic, said he was
"sorry for breaking your privacy and post to your wall" but
that he had "no other choice" after being ignored by
Facebook's security team.
An
engineer on Facebook's security team, Matt Jones, posted
a public explanation saying
that although Mr Shreateh's original email should have been followed
up, the way he had reported the bug had violated the site's
"responsible disclosure policy".
He
added that as Mr Shreateh had highlighted the bug "using the
accounts of real people without their permission", he would not
qualify for a payout.
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