A clever spammer found a glitch in Facebook's photo upload system and used
it to post thousands of unwanted Wall messages this week.

Facebook confirmed the bug Friday, after notifying affected users of the
issue.

Andrew Jones was one of the victims. He thought that his Facebook account
had been hijacked Sunday after a friend pointed out a spam message on his
wall. He quickly changed his password, but worried that some of his other
e-mail accounts might have been taken over too. "No other signs of
compromise were visible, and I concluded the most likely scenario was a
public computer I had used recently had some type of malware on it," he told
the IDG News Service via e-mail.

Turns out that the problem was all Facebook's.

"Earlier this week, we discovered a bug in the code that processes photos as
they're uploaded. This bug caused us not to make the correct checks when
determining whether a photo should be posted to a person's profile,"
Facebook said Friday in an e-mailed statement. "We quickly worked to resolve
the issue and fixed it shortly after discovering it. For a short period of
time before it was fixed, a single spammer was able to post photos to
people's profiles that they hadn't approved."

Most of the messages promised "Free iPhones," a common spam message on
Facebook these days. The free iPhone and iPad messages generally take users
to websites where they are instructed to fill out marketing surveys or sign
up for product subscriptions. Victims have reported having their phone
numbers inundated with calls after filling out these surveys.

Facebook says that the spammer hit thousands of profiles before the company
removed the spammy photos and notified affected users. No accounts were
compromised as a result of the bug, Facebook said.

People whose Walls were hit with the spam got a notice from Facebook's
security team, reading:

"For a few hours on Sunday, there was a spamming incident on Facebook.
During this time, photos -- mostly of supposedly 'free' iPhones -- were
posted to some people's Walls, including yours. We've removed the photo from
your Wall and fixed the issue that allowed spammers to do this. We're sorry
about the photo, but can assure you that this did not affect the security of
your account in any way."

Spammers love Facebook because users are more likely to click on Facebook
messages and wall posts than on links in unsolicited e-mail messages.

This week, Facebook introduced new controls that allow users to see if
unauthorized computers have been used to log into their accounts.

But spammers will keep trying to use Facebook, according to Chris Boyd, a
senior researcher with security vendor GFI Software.
The spam images used by this "Free iPod" spammer can be highly effective, he
said. "Image spam is a great way for scammers to promote fake applications
and surveys," he said via instant message. "An individual likely to fall for
something like this will probably be more attracted by a nice picture than a
random spam-link."

@YAHOO

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