BEIJING, Jan. 27 — Online social network service Facebook rolled out additional measures for its members to protect their online privacy.
The security enhancements came on Wednesday immediately after Facebook founder and CEO Mark Zuckerberg’s fan page was hacked.
A bogus message was posted on Zuckerberg’s page, calling Facebook to become a “social business” instead of a for-profit company, followed by a link to a Wikipedia page that explains the term.
The message was taken down quickly, but media reports say more than 1,800 Facebook users gave a thumb-up to the post by clicking a “like” button under it.
Facebook announced the new security features include the availability of one-time passwords that U.S. Facebook members could use on public computers.
Users in the U.S. sending a mobile phone text message reading “otp” to 32665 can get a response containing a password that works only once and expires in 20 minutes.
Facebook will also enable members remotely check whether they are still logged onto the service at other computers and then sign out from afar.
Recently Facebook has drawn increasing scrutiny for its security controls. On Monday, French president Nicolas Sarkozy’s Facebook account was hacked with a false message saying he would not run for re-election in 2012.
On Xinhua Web site: http://news.xinhuanet.com/english2010/sci/2011-01/27/c_13709923.htm