After a flurry of privacy and security incidents in the past few months, Facebook has yet again managed to get into hot soup in another privacy misadventure. A security expert who goes by the name e-sushi found out that Facebook was asking email passwords for account verification. If users tried to log into their accounts, they would be prompted to enter their own email passwords as a measure of verification.
Upon informing the social networking company, it said that the shoddy security practice did not store passwords, and mentioned that would be dropped soon.
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Facebook receives backlash
Cybersecurity expert Jake Williams opines that the social networking website should stick to such methods. “That’s beyond sketchy. They should not be taking your password or handling your password in the background. If that’s what’s required to sign up with Facebook, you’re better off not being on Facebook.” he told The Daily Beast.
Moreover, e-sushi warns that it could harm privacy significantly. “By going down that road, you're practically fishing for passwords you are not supposed to know!” he tweeted.
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