Explicit images believed to have been
sent through messaging service, Snapchat, were reportedly put online,
with threats from hackers to upload more.
Users who had been accessing the service
via a third-party app, and not the official Snapchat app, had their
images intercepted, according to a report by British Broadcasting
Corporation.
As half of its users are aged between 13 and 17, there is concern that many of the images may be of children.
Snapchat said its servers “were never breached”.
The company added, “Snapchatters were
victimised by their use of third-party apps to send and receive Snaps, a
practice that we expressly prohibit in our Terms of Use precisely
because they compromise our users’ security.
“We vigilantly monitor the App Store and
Google Play for illegal third-party apps and have succeeded in getting
many of these removed.”
However, security researchers said Snapchat had to take more responsibility over user data.
“For them to just turn round and say,
‘It’s the users’ fault,’ does seem harsh,” said Mark James, a security
specialist from ESET.
“They give the perception it is safe,
they need to make it safe. They need to crack down on people’s ability
to access their data.”
The images were uploaded to the internet with a download link shared on a message board on Thursday night, according to reports.
The download has since gone offline, but hackers threatened to post thousands more images.
However, some doubted the authenticity of the images, suggesting many of them were duplicates or “fake”.
Snapchat is a messaging app that allows
the sharing of videos and images that “disappear” after a short period
of time, usually just a few seconds.
But according to Business Insider
reporter James Cook, hackers had boasted of having access to 13
gigabytes’ worth of pictures that had been intercepted over a number of
years.
Speculation as to the source of the leak
has pointed towards two third-party, unauthorised services that offered
the ability to save Snapchat messages permanently. It suspected that at
least one such service was keeping a database of all the pictures and
videos that had passed through it.
The leak is yet another troubling security and privacy incident for Snapchat, said security consultant Brian Honanpunchng
.
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