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Facebook Parent Company Hit With Massive Fine for Plaintext Password Storage

Meta Fined a Whopping $100 Million for Password Blunder

Remember that time you forgot your Facebook password and had to reset it? Seems like a simple, everyday occurrence, right? Well, what if I told you that for a period, Facebook’s parent company, Meta, was storing some user passwords as plain text? You read that right, plain text!

What does this mean exactly?

Imagine leaving your diary open on a park bench. Anyone could walk by and read your deepest secrets! Storing passwords in plain text is kind of like that. If someone hacks into the system, boom, they have access to all those passwords. Not exactly the kind of security you’d expect from a tech giant, right?

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The Irish Data Protection Commission (DPC), kind of like the data police of Europe, definitely didn’t find it amusing. They slapped Meta with a hefty fine – over $100 million! Why Ireland, you ask? Well, Meta’s European headquarters happen to be there, making it the DPC’s responsibility to lay down the law.

Facebook/Meta – The Big No-No:

Storing passwords in plain text is a huge violation of data protection regulations. It’s like leaving the vault door wide open at a bank. There are secure ways to store passwords, like hashing and salting (no, not the kind you sprinkle on food!), which make them gobbledygook to anyone unauthorized.

Facebook/Meta: The Takeaway:

This whole ordeal is a stark reminder that even the biggest tech giants aren’t above the law. It also highlights how crucial data protection is in this digital age. So next time you create a password, remember this cautionary tale. A strong, unique password and two-factor authentication are your best defense against the digital villains out there!

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