On Friday, Facebook admitted that a bug made the private contact 
information – either email addresses or phone numbers — of 6 million 
users accidentally accessible to Facebook who downloaded their 
account histories onto their own computers. Compared to Facebook’s over 1
 billion total members, 6 million isn’t much. But any security flaw has 
the potential to frighten people away from a website.
A bug allowed “some of a person’s contact information (email or phone
 number) to be accessed by people who either had some contact 
information about that person or some connection to them,”
 Facebook 
wrotein a note on its security page. Using the network’s “Download Your 
Information” tool, some Facebook members were inadvertently sent the 
phone numbers or email address of Facebook friends that were otherwise 
private. Facebook assured users that the bug was fixed within a day, and
 that there is no evidence that the information was used maliciously.
The bug was found not by Facebook’s team, but by someone going 
through Facebook’s “white hat” hacker program, which offers a bounty for 
anyone who can find bugs on the site, paying a minimum reward of $500 
per bug. The bounty is awarded “based on [the bug's] severity and 
creativity,” according to Facebook’s White Hat page.

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