My girlfriend's account has been hacked, the hacker was able to change the username and password and unlink her email, all without Facebook trying to stop them. She made a new account and set up 2fa to prevent this from happening again, and that was supposed to be it. But today, the same person was able to link the OLD Facebook account to her INSTAGRAM. She had 2fa set up for Instagram, but was not notified that her account was being linked. She still has access to the account, but now the hacker does too, and she is unable to take away that access.

We have spent hours going in circles on the Facebook help page. None of the articles are useful because every account recovery option requires you to either know the password (which the hacker changed) or the account email (which they unlinked)


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I've been playing around with different login forms online lately to see how they work. One of them was the Facebook login form. When I logged out of my account my email and password were autocompleted by my browser. Then I decided to misspell my email and see what would happen if I tried to log in.

Then I also tried misspelling my password and as long as it was not too far off my real password I could log in no problem (with the password it worked when adding one random letter before or after the real password, but not when adding a letter in the middle of it).

For example, if your password is "myRealPassword!" but you submit "MYrEALpASSWORD!" (capslock on, shift inverting capslock). The submitted password obviously doesn't match what they have stored in their database. Rather than reject you flat out, Facebook tries to up the user experience by trying to "correct" a few common mistakes such as inserting a random character before or after, capitalizing (or not) the first character, or mistakenly using capslock. Facebook applies these filters one by one and checks the newly "corrected" password against what they have hashed in their database. If one of the permutations matches, Facebook assumes you simply made a small mistake and authorizes your session.

While worrying at first glance, this is actually still perfectly secure for a few reasons. First and foremost, Facebook is able to do this without storing the password in plaintext because they are transforming your provided (and untrusted) input from the form field and checking if it matches. Secondly, this isn't very helpful for someone trying to brute force the password because online attacks are nigh impossible thanks to rate limiting and captchas. Finally, the odds of an attacker/evil spouse knowing the text of your password and not the capitalization are abysmally small and so the risk created as a result of this feature is equally small.

It is long know that Facebook allows you on purpose to log in with the password case reversed or the first character capitalized (see this article). They do this while storing only a hashed password. Are you seeing that more differences are allowed?

They might have decided that usability is of utter importance and, if there is a log in attempt for an email address for which there is not an account, automatically attempt the log in with the most similar username, but -while not completely bad- it doesn't seem a good approach, as someone else could sign up tomorrow with the [email protected] email and, although unlikely, also use Password123 as password, then what?

If you consider the login process as a whole, this measure can actually increase security. Instead of granting users several login attempts to manually fix common misspellings, the site tries to fix those misspellings automatically. As a result, the average number of login attempts a user needs goes down, which means a more strict rate limiting to an attacker who tries out various common passwords, not slight variations of the same password.

I am trying to download the oculus rift app on my gaming laptop and it is asking me to put in my oculus password. I have forgotten it so I pressed the 'forgot password' button and it led me to a website wanting me to put my email in, and once I did it just said, 'You merged this Oculus account with a Facebook account. Please go back and log in with Facebook.' I logged in with Facebook, it didn't do anything. I cannot reset my Oculus password. Please help.

Hi sermarfacebook! We're sorry to hear you're having an issue with resetting your password. We'd be happy to look into this with you. Please send us a private message with the details of your issue as well as your account information (full name, alias, email on your account), and we'll move forward from there.

Hello, I have the same problem. I just get looped back to "login with facebook". If that was possible I would not need to reset my oculus password! So how on earth can I do this? The link to does not contain any information on this whatsoever.

This is driving me nuts....I want to set up Spotify on my SmartTV. When I try, it asks me for my username and password. Since I login to Spotify through Facebook, I can't give the SmartTV a username and password.

I found on Spotify that my account is not only linked to my Facebook account, but I've been given a 10 digit number as a username. However, when I try to reset the password for that "Spotify (ten digit #) Username" it asks for my current password. Obviously I don't have it because if I did, I wouldn't need to reset it. So I'm stuck.

I already have a premium account so I don't want to close the spotify account, lose all my playlists, etc. I can't believe there isn't a way to log into Spotify without using my Facebook account. That's just wierd!

How do I set up Spotify on my SmartTV if I don't have a password for my "Spotify (ten digit #) username" and I can't use my Facebook account to set it up on the SmartTV because it requires a Spotify username and Spotify password, not a facebook account???

1) Go to the link _url=/uk/account/set-device-password/

 2) On the page that the link takes you to, log into Spotify using your Facebook log in details

 3) You will be taken to your Spotify subscription page. Look at the very top right hand corner of the page. You will see a Spotify account number. It is a ten digit number. Make a note of this, as it will be your Device Spotify log in username.

 4) Next scroll to the bottom of the page and create a password. Make a note of this, it will be your Device Spotify password.

 5) Use the username and password to log into your Spotify/Device account.

 6) Enjoy playing and listening

Need to find someone's Facebook password because of an emergency? You may be able to recover it using Facebook's Trusted Contacts feature. This feature allows you to access someone's Facebook password and log into their account. It only works in certain circumstances, which we'll review below. Keep reading to learn how to retrieve someone's Facebook password using their email and the Trusted Contacts feature.

If you have an inactive Facebook account that you want to remove, you can do so by following a few simple steps. Taking the time to delete an outdated account ensures that your personal information is not out there for the public to access.

Once completed, the account is permanently deleted from Facebook. It may take a few days for the account to be removed from the social media platform. Some things to remember when deleting an account is to make sure you save any media you want to keep such as photos or videos. After your account is deleted, any content associated with it cannot be recovered.

Deactivating your Facebook account does not entirely disconnect it from the platform. Connections to third-party apps, messages and other features remain active, and the information remains available. To completely delete your Facebook account, you have to take some extra steps:

Q: What is the best way to delete an old Facebook account without a password or email?

A: The best way to delete an old Facebook account without a password or email is to use the Request Deletion function. This process requires submitting an identification document to prove your identity and lets you delete your account permanently without having the password or email.

Once logged into a personal account, you then have the option to create a business page. The management of the business page also happens through your personal account. You must be logged in to your personal account before you can post, edit, or take any other action on your business page.

It can be very distressing to discover that your Facebook account has been hacked, and your data violated, but taking swift action and increasing awareness can help you regain control and protect your privacy. This blog post will explore what to do if your Facebook account was hacked and password changed: How to manage a hacked Facebook account recovery, how to report a compromised Facebook account, and what to do to prevent FB hacks from happening in the first place.

If you still have access to your account, log out from all devices immediately. This can be done by going to "Settings & Privacy" > "Settings" > "Security and Login" > "Where You're Logged In." From there, you can log out of all sessions.

Facebook offers several security features to help you maintain the integrity of your account. As well as following the action items mentioned above, if you believe your Facebook account has been hacked you need to report the issue to Facebook as soon as possible. 0852c4b9a8

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