Newstral
Article
Ars Technica on 2019-03-21 22:39
Facebook developers wrote apps that stored users’ passwords in plaintext
Related news
- Facebook Stored Millions of Passwords in Plaintext—Change Yours NowWired.com
- Facebook now says 'millions of Instagram users' had their passwords stored in plaintextdpreview.com
- 13 million plaintext passwords belonging to webhost users leaked onlineArs Technica
- Facebook admits it stored ‘hundreds of millions’ of account passwords in plaintextTechCrunch
- SFacebook says it stored millions of passwords in plain textsanmarcosrecord.com
- Hack on PS and Xbox attackers leaks DDoS customers’ plaintext passwordsArs Technica
- Facebook Says Millions of Users’ Passwords Were Improperly Stored in Internal Systemswsj.com
- Google Has Stored Some Passwords in Plaintext Since 2005Wired.com
- Robinhood stored passwords in plaintext, so change yours nowTechCrunch
- Google says some G Suite user passwords were stored in plaintextTechCrunch
- Facebook asked some users for their email passwords, because why notArs Technica
- Report: Instagram bug revealed some users passwords as plaintext in URLsdpreview.com
- New chip lets gadget developers build mobile apps into their devicesArs Technica
- Facebook admits storing millions of users’ passwords in plain texttimesofisrael.com
- Is Facebook down? Mayhem as users across the world complain they can't use social media appsThe Daily Record
- Google Play apps laden with ad malware were downloaded by millions of usersArs Technica
- Google releases Chrome extension that alerts users of breached passwordsArs Technica
- Apps with Chinese funds face users’ ireThe Times of India