MACK AKRAN PRAYER & OUTREACH MINISTRY FEED A FAMILY IN NEED Around the world, 828 million people suffer from food insecurity. Over 43 million are on the brink of famine. In Nigeria over 4.4 million people are suffering from food insecurity eg northeast Nigeria. Over 37% of people nationwide live below the poverty line. While over 2.2 million Donate food items today to fight the effects of poverty in Nigeria, Africa & worldwide.WhatsApp: 2348062159287 Call: 2348094722243.
Trending Post
-
•I’ll replace sharing formula in Nigeria with the production formula By Chioma Onuegbu, Uyo THE Presidential candidate of the Labour Party...
-
England, Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland could all be changing divisions The 2022-23 Nations League group stages come to an end this we...
-
Pre-Colonial Education Before western education breached Nigerian borders, children were taught two different kinds of education across th...
Friday, September 16, 2022
US school app accounts hacked to send explicit image
Parents in the US have reported receiving a notorious explicit image after hackers targeted a school app with 10 million users including teachers, students and family members.
There were many reports from schools and teachers of the image being sent from hacked accounts on the Seesaw app.
Seesaw said that a link to an "inappropriate image" was shared and it had taken action to stop the issue.
The graphic image is a highly explicit internet meme intended to shock.
Somebody who works with teachers and pupils told Seesaw via Twitter: "You have a hack in messages that's allowing an inappropriate picture to be shared with families and teachers across multiple districts. Please take action!"
The BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.
View original tweet on Twitter
In its statement, Seesaw denied that hackers had gained administrative access but had instead hacked "isolated" individual accounts.
It shared more detail about the attack and what it did in response on a status page.
"Widely available compromised emails/passwords that were reused across services were used to gain unauthorised access to Seesaw accounts," it said.
Some parents told US media of their horror when the image appeared in group chats.
The head of one school in Milwaukee warned parents not to blame those who appeared to have sent the message.
"While specific parent names were attached to these messages," the school's statement said, "we know that these parents were not involved."
Seesaw said in response to the incident it had:
completely disabled the messaging feature to stop additional users seeing the inappropriate message
removed the inappropriate message from accounts to which it was sent
reset the passwords of all compromised accounts and notified users
Many schools sent out warnings about clicking on links obscured by bit.ly - a link shortening service.
Seesaw said it had worked with bit.ly to disable the links.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
you can just imagine
ReplyDelete