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Facebook Security IT Idle

Chinese Spies Used Fake Facebook Profile To Friend NATO Officials 117

An anonymous reader writes "Late last year, senior British military officers, Defense Ministry officials, and other government officials were tricked into becoming Facebook friends with someone masquerading as United States Navy admiral James Stavridis. By doing so, they exposed their own personal information (such as private e-mail addresses, phone numbers, pictures, the names of family members, and possibly even the details of their movements), to unknown hackers."
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Chinese Spies Used Fake Facebook Profile To Friend NATO Officials

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  • Re:Unknown Hackers? (Score:4, Informative)

    by sootman ( 158191 ) on Monday March 12, 2012 @12:05PM (#39326847) Homepage Journal

    > Surprisingly, the headline is more accurate than the story.

    More accurate than the submission, you mean. TFA (I'm new here) actually addresses that point:

    This type of compromising attempts are called 'Social Engineering' and has nothing to do with 'hacking' or 'espionage', a SHAPE spokesperson said in a statement.

  • by peragrin ( 659227 ) on Monday March 12, 2012 @12:21PM (#39327035)

    The trick does he seperate work from personal. The current trend in OS's is to combine everything into one. See windows 8, iOS, andriod etc.

    So if you can hack one you have easy access to another. Also realize youhack a personal network. Then wait for a secure machine to join it( NATO laptop) and hack it, or at least monitor the VPN connection.

    You use ones personal life to inflintrate secure work networks.

    It is why i dont use facebook, etc.

  • A friend of mine who retired from CIA after 26 years once told me that his family was only happy for six of those years... and not six consecutive years. Cut off from family and friends back home and in contact only by letters and the occasional "home leave" of a month or two, he was trying to fit back in to the country he spent his life trying to serve (back in the days when the Agency was less of an operational force and more of an intelligence gathering organization). I can see how Facebook would have made their lives more enjoyable with all the family and friends news (and even minutia). I'm sure it's a security risk par excellance but I can certainly understand why they'd do it. And I can especially understand why a wife, stuck inside an apartment in Djibouti trying to order six months of canned food from Denmark, might.

    I don't expect Slashdot readers to grok it, though.

  • by s.petry ( 762400 ) on Monday March 12, 2012 @01:48PM (#39328577)

    You obviously know little about how Social Engineering works if you believe that to be true. When I worked DOD it was recommended that we never post information to any Social network about where we worked, what we did for a living, who our co-workers were, etc.. This was not just for the protection of the Government, but also protection of your own family and friends.

    I no longer work DOD, but when I did I did not post on anything including /. with my credentials.

  • Re:oh boy (Score:4, Informative)

    by cayenne8 ( 626475 ) on Monday March 12, 2012 @03:41PM (#39330463) Homepage Journal

    Who doesn't have a fake facebook to friend pornstars and sluts?

    I don't.

    I don't have any FB accounts at all...fake or real.

    Keeps things neater that way....

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