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Malwarebytes

Carnival confirms data breach impacting nearly 6 million Kali365 phishing kit bypasses MFA and steals Microsoft logins Company bragged phone mics could listen to conversations. They couldn’t. Fake LinkedIn emails abuse Adobe to track victims Fake software on GitHub and SourceForge distribute Deno RAT 700+ education and tech websites hijacked in huge ClickFix malware campaign Scammers pretending to be Microsoft had help from US executives A week in security (May 18 – May 24) Update Chrome now: Critical bugs could let attackers run code Microsoft Defender vulnerabilities are being exploited in the wild TikTok, YouTube, and Roblox face scrutiny, but age gates won’t fix child safety Catch spyware in the act with Windows Webcam Monitoring Researchers left AI agents alone in a virtual town and watched it all unravel Fake malware-signing service Fox Tempest dismantled by Microsoft Firefox 151 packs big privacy upgrades into a small update Biometrics, diagnoses, and bank details exposed in major healthcare breach Facebook scam promises cheap Aldi meat boxes, steals payment info instead YouTube wants your face to fight deepfakes Microsoft is changing Edge’s plaintext password behavior A week in security (May 11 – May 17) AI is distorting the Holocaust (Lock and Code S07E10) Attackers replaced JDownloader installer downloads with malware Meta’s confusing new approach to chat privacy Why Malwarebytes blocks some Yahoo Mail redirects Deepfake sextortion forces schools to remove student photos from websites Texas sued Netflix over claims it secretly collected and sold users’ data May 2026 Patch Tuesday: no zero-days but plenty to fix Fake Claude search results lure Mac users into ClickFix attack 1 in 8 employees have sold company logins or know someone who has Stolen Canvas data was “returned” after hacker agreement, Instructure says Yarbo responds to robot flaws that could mow down their owners A week in security (May 4 – May 10) Microsoft says Edge’s plaintext password behavior is “by design” ShinyHunters escalates Canvas attacks with school login defacements Massive AI investment scam network spans 15,500 domains If a fake moustache can fool age checks, is the Online Safety Act working? Google Chrome’s silent 4GB AI download problem Attackers adopt JavaScript runtime Bun to spread NWHStealer Millions of students’ personal data stolen in major education breach Update WhatsApp now: Two new flaws could expose you to malicious files Cyberattacks are raising your prices (Lock and Code S07E09) Thousands of Facebook accounts stolen by phishing emails sent through Google The 2026 World Cup scam economy is already running before the first whistle A week in security (April 27 – May 3) 3 easy-to-miss cybersecurity risks for small businesses Actively exploited cPanel bug exposes millions of websites to takeover More PayPal emails hijacked to deliver tech support scams Hackers stole hundreds of thousands of Roblox accounts: Here’s what to do Researchers built a chatbot that only knows the world before 1931 Microsoft won’t patch PhantomRPC: Feature or bug? 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30,000 private Facebook images allegedly downloaded by Meta employee
2026-04-09 · via Malwarebytes

Every tech company tells you your data is safe. They’ve (hopefully) got encryption, access controls, and zero-trust architectures—the whole glossy security brochure. And then someone on the inside writes a script to steal your private photos anyway.

That’s what a former Meta employee based in London is under criminal investigation for. He allegedly downloaded around 30,000 private images belonging to Facebook users. The Metropolitan Police’s cybercrime unit is handling the case.

According to court papers, the accused didn’t just browse around; he built a custom script designed to circumvent Meta’s internal detection systems.

Meta says it discovered the breach over a year ago, fired the individual, notified affected users, and referred the matter to UK law enforcement. The suspect is currently on police bail and must report to officers in May.

Meta’s track record on data protection is far from spotless. It agreed to pay $725 million in 2022 to settle a class-action lawsuit over the Cambridge Analytica scandal, where third-party developers harvested data from millions of Facebook users. Stories keep surfacing about Meta that give us pause when considering privacy and user safety. For example, Facebook engineers have admitted that they didn’t even know where user data was kept.

Rogue insiders

This kind of thing keeps happening. FinWise Bank disclosed last year that a former employee had potentially accessed records belonging to 689,000 customers. That breach went undetected for over a year. Coinbase also revealed that support staff working overseas had been bribed to steal data on nearly 70,000 customers. Even employees at electronics repair firms like to snoop around customers’ data in ways they shouldn’t.

What drives insiders to cross the line? Research into insider threat psychology has found that many documented incidents involve employees in technical professions like system administrators, database operators, and programmers. This makes sense, as they will likely have both the access and the skills to evade detection.

Motives range from financial gain to personal spite (as with this grocery store employee who leaked staff data) or voyeurism (as with this Yahoo engineer who accessed women’s nudes including those of women he knew personally). Employees will often commit their crimes after they’ve left the company, if administrators are lax about revoking system access.

How to protect yourself

Companies will tell you they take privacy seriously, and many do.

The standard defenses by companies against insider threats are well known: least-privilege access controls, multi-factor authentication, continuous monitoring of user behavior, and regular security audits. But the Meta case suggests that someone determined enough and technical enough to write their own tools can still sometimes circumvent those defenses.

So what can users do?

Store your most sensitive data (like private images) in a secure, password-protected environment. If a service doesn’t offer strong controls, it’s worth asking whether you’re comfortable trusting everyone who might have access behind the scenes.

Check out how to reduce your digital footprint and limit the info scammers and extortionists can use against you.


Scammers don’t need to hack you. They just need you to click once. 

Malwarebytes Identity Theft Protection catches suspicious activity before it becomes a problem.

About the author

Danny Bradbury has been a journalist specialising in technology since 1989 and a freelance writer since 1994. He covers a broad variety of technology issues for audiences ranging from consumers through to software developers and CIOs. He also ghostwrites articles for many C-suite business executives in the technology sector. He hails from the UK but now lives in Western Canada.