Facebook has now revealed that data of over 87 million users was shared with the political consultancy firm Cambridge Analytica (37 million more than the previous estimates). According to the reports, the data was scraped by Cambridge psychology professor Aleksandr Kogan’s survey app via Facebook Login.
Facebook now estimates that approx 305,000 people had installed the This Is Your Digital Life quiz that had was responsible for data-scraping. The figure previously suggested had been 270,000.
According to the reports, about 97 percent of the installations occurred within the US though, over 16 million of the total users affected are thought to be from other countries.
Facebook revealed the information via a blog post written by CTO, Mike Schroepfer. The blog post also mentioned about its privacy changes, which include restricting third-party app access, and deleting phone call and text information that's over a year old.
Besides this, Facebook said that it is ending a feature that lets users search for a profile using a phone number or personal email, and suggested that bad actors have abused the ability and taken information from personal profiles as a result.
Starting immediately, these privacy changes will now be implemented:
* Third-party apps will no longer be able to access the member list of a group.
* Third-party apps can no longer access personal information, such as names and profile photos, etc.
* Facebook is also limiting the use of the Pages API by requiring all future access to the entire access layer be approved by the company.
* Third-party apps can no longer ask for personal data like religious views, political affiliation, relationship status, custom friends list, education and work history, and activity on fitness, book reading, music listening, etc.
* Facebook is also changing its opt-in call and text history feature on Messenger and Facebook Lite on Android.
* Facebook will no longer let anyone input a user’s phone number or email address to find them on the social network.