May 2, 2018 at 10:42AM
via TechCrunch
There’s no shortage of Facebook news this week on account of F8, but this creepy Facebook-adjacent event with a good outcome seems worth noting. An engineer accused of abusing his access to data at the company in Tinder messages has been fired, NBC News reported.
The issue arose over the weekend: Jackie Stokes, founder of Spyglass Security, explained on Twitter that someone she knew had received some rather creepy messages from someone she personally confirmed was a Facebook engineer.
The person (gender unspecified) described himself as a “professional stalker,” which however accurate it may be (they attempt to unmask hackers) is probably not the best way to introduce yourself to a potential partner. They then implied that they had been employing their professional acumen in pursuit of identifying their new quarry.
I really, really hope I’m wrong about this. pic.twitter.com/NDkOptx8Hv
— Jackie Stokes (@find_evil) April 30, 2018
Note that the above isn’t the whole exchange, just an excerpt.
Facebook employees contacted Stokes for more information and began investigating. Alex Stamos, Facebook’s chief security officer, told NBC News that “we have strict policy controls and technical restrictions so employees only access the data they need to do their jobs – for example to fix bugs, manage customer support issues or respond to valid legal requests. Employees who abuse these controls will be fired.”
And fired he was, Stamos added in another statement. I’ve reached out to the company for confirmation and more details, including what those controls are that should ostensibly have prevented the person from accessing the data of a prospective date.
It’s disturbing that someone in such a privileged position would use it for such tawdry and selfish purposes, but not really surprising. It is however also heartening that the person was fired for doing so promptly, and while everyone was busy at a major conference at that.
I'd like to thank the many Facebook employees who reached out to me personally to find out what they could do to help, and especially their CSO @alexstamos for deft handling of a dicey issue during a time when words and actions matter more than ever.https://t.co/W8Joe2Bc6e
— Jackie Stokes (@find_evil) May 2, 2018