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mladen antonov/Agence France-Presse/Getty Images
A week after discovering the worst data-breach in its history,
Facebook
Inc.
said Tuesday that it has found no evidence third-party apps that use the company’s popular log-in service were affected by the hack.
“We have now analyzed our logs for all third-party apps installed or logged during the attack we discovered last week,” the company said in a statement. “That investigation has so far found no evidence that the attackers accessed any apps using Facebook Login.”
App-makers and security researchers have worried that third-party apps such as Tinder and Spotify might have been accessed during the incident. Hackers gained access to almost 50 million Facebook accounts, the company said Friday when it first disclosed the attack publicly.
The hackers exploited a series of flaws in Facebook’s website that allowed them to steal access tokens—digital keys that keep users logged into Facebook—which in turn let the hackers impersonate users and access any private information available to the people they were impersonating.
Facebook is still investigating the scope of the breach. On Friday, the company said it wasn’t sure if any of the account information was actually misused. The company also said it reported the incident to law enforcement.
Facebook could face fines of as much as $1.63 billion if the company is found to have violated the European Union’s new privacy law, known as GDPR, which took effect in late May.
Write to Robert McMillan at [email protected]
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