No reward for Zuckerberg Facebook hacker

Khalil Shreateh says he took the unusual step of hacking into Mark Zuckerberg's profile after being ignored by the Facebook security team.

Palestinian researcher Khalil Shreateh

A researcher who hacked into Facebook chief Mark Zuckerberg's profile won't get a customary reward. (AAP)

A researcher who hacked into Facebook chief Mark Zuckerberg's profile to expose a security flaw won't get the customary reward payment from the social network.

While Facebook offers rewards for those who find security holes, it seems that Palestinian researcher Khalil Shreateh went too far by posting the information on Zuckerberg's own profile page.

Shreateh said on his blog he found a way for Facebook users to circumvent security and modify a user's timeline.

He said he took the unusual step of hacking into Zuckerberg's profile after being ignored by the Facebook security team.

"So i did post to Mark Zuckerberg's timeline , as those pictures shows," he said, including screen shots of the posting.

"Dear Mark Zuckerberg," he wrote. "First sorry for breaking your privacy and post to your wall, i had no other choice to make after all the reports i sent to Facebook team. My name is KHALIL from Palestine."

His reward for exposing the flaw was having his Facebook account disabled.

He later got a message saying, "We are unfortunately not able to pay you for this vulnerability because your actions violated our Terms of Service. We do hope, however, that you continue to work with us to find vulnerabilities in the site."

Facebook says it appreciates help with security but not by hacking into user accounts.

Facebook security engineer Matt Jones posted a comment on Sunday on a security forum saying "we fixed this bug on Thursday," and admitted that "we should have asked for additional... instructions after his initial report."

"We get hundreds of reports every day," Jones said. "We have paid out over $US1 million to hundreds of reporters. However, many of the reports we get are nonsense or misguided."


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Source: AAP


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