Pravda je banální. Počítačový odborník jménem Ron Bowes napsal malý program, který automatizoval stáhování dat o uživatelích Facebooku. Program to byl poměrně old school viz dále a Bowes nevyužil Open Graph API (to je limitováno 100 dotazy za hodinu na jednu IP adresu, mrk, mrk pane Dočekale), ale šel cestou, které se říka scrapování stránek. Zachoval se vlastně jako běžný internetový vyhledávač, jen se soustředil na Facebook. Stažené údaje publikoval prostřednictvím sítě torrentové služby. Údaje jsou samy o sobě neškodné, jen propojují jméno uživatele a čísla na FB. Jak to kdosi komentoval na Twitteru: v telefoním seznamu je o vás víc informací.
Momentálně je originální blogpost nedostupný, stejně jako zdrojový kód, který bylo použit. Proto jeho hlavní část přetiskuji z cache Googlu pod článkem. (až bude opět dostupný, smažu ho). Stejně jako jsem umístil na Paste Code zdrojový kód programu, který použil. Když si ho projdete, zjistite jediné: ten člověk měl prostě dobrý nápad jak strojově vyškrabat veřejně přístupná data. Mimochodem pokud je na jeho činnosti něco nelegální, proč rovnou nekřičet na Google nebo Yahoo? Navíc Yahoo Boss Search API vám zajistí přístup ještě luxusnější.
Co z celé pseudokauzy plyne? V zásadě nic nového:
- drtivá většina novinářů nerozumí tomu o čem píše (zdravím novinky.cz)
- pokud už mají aspoň elementární znalost, neobtěžují se jít ke kořenů věcí (pooh.cz)
- a konečně Facebook je dnes stejně milován bulvárem jako velká hudební stár a tak podobných mediálních kravin můžeme čekat ještě víc
To je vše.
P.S. A ještě slibená podstatná část původního blogpostu Rona Bowese:
Return of the Facebook Snatchers
Background
Way back when I worked at Symantec, my friend Nick wrote a blog that caused a little bit of trouble for us: Attack of the Facebook Snatchers. I was blog editor at the time, and I went through the usual sign off process and, eventually, published it. Facebook was none too happy, but we fought for it and, in the end, we got to leave the blog up in its original form.
Why do I bring this up? Well last week @FSLabsAdvisor wrote an interesting Tweet: it turns out, by heading to https://www.facebook.com/directory, you can get a list of every searchable user on all of Facebook!
My first idea was simple: spider the lists, generate first-initial-last-name (and similar) lists, then hand them over to @Ithilgore to use in Nmap's awesome new bruteforce tool he's working on, Ncrack.
But as I thought more about it, and talked to other people, I realized that this is a scary privacy issue. I can find the name of pretty much every person on Facebook. Facebook helpfully informs you that "[a]nyone can opt out of appearing here by changing their Search privacy settings" -- but that doesn't help much anymore considering I already have them all (and you will too, when you download the torrent). Suckers!
Once I have the name and URL of a user, I can view, by default, their picture, friends, information about them, and some other details. If the user has set their privacy higher, at the very least I can view their name and picture. So, if any searchable user has friends that are non-searchable, those friends just opted into being searched, like it or not! Oops :)
The lists
Which brings me to the next topic: the list! I wrote a quick Ruby script (which has since become a more involved Nmap Script that I haven't used for harvesting yet) that I used to download the full directory. I should warn you that it isn't exactly the most user friendly interface -- I wrote it for myself, primarily, I'm only linking to it for reference. I don't really suggest you try to recreate my spidering. It's a waste of several hundred gigs of bandwidth.
The results were spectacular. 171 million names (100 million unique). My original plan was to use this list to generate a list of the top usernames (based on first initial last name):
129369 jsmith
79365 ssmith
77713 skhan
75561 msmith
74575 skumar
72467 csmith
71791 asmith
67786 jjohnson
66693 dsmith
66431 akhan
Or first name last initial:
100225 johns
97676 johnm
97310 michaelm
93386 michaels
88978 davids
85481 michaelb
84824 davidm
82677 davidb
81500 johnb
77800 michaelc
Or even the top usernames based on first name dot last name (sorry, I can't link this one due to bandwidth concerns; but it's included in the torrent):
17204 john.smith
7440 david.smith
7200 michael.smith
6784 chris.smith
6371 mike.smith
6149 arun.kumar
5980 james.smith
5939 amit.kumar
5926 imran.khan
5861 jason.smith
Or even the most common first or last names:
977014 michael
963693 john
924816 david
819879 chris
640957 mike
602088 james
584438 mark
515686 jason
503658 robert
484403 jessica
913465 smith
571819 johnson
512312 jones
503266 williams
471390 brown
386764 lee
360010 khan
355639 singh
343220 kumar
324972 miller
So, those are the top 10 lists. But I'll bet you want everything!
The Torrent
But it occurred to me that this is public information that Facebook puts out, I'm assuming for search engines or whatever, and that it wouldn't be right for me to keep it private. Why waste Facebook's bandwidth and make everybody scrape it, right?
So, I present you with: a torrent! If you haven't download it, download it now! And seed it for as long as you can.
This torrent contains:
* The URL of every searchable Facebook user's profile
* The name of every searchable Facebook user, both unique and by count (perfect for post-processing, datamining, etc)
* Processed lists, including first names with count, last names with count, potential usernames with count, etc
* The programs I used to generate everything
So, there you have it: lots of awesome data from Facebook. Now, I just have to find one more problem with Facebook so I can write "Revenge of the Facebook Snatchers" and complete the trilogy. Any suggestions? >:-)
Limitations
So far, I have only indexed the searchable users, not their friends. Getting their friends will be significantly more data to process, and I don't have those capabilities right now. I'd like to tackle that in the future, though, so if anybody has any bandwidth they'd like to donate, all I need is an ssh account and Nmap installed.
An additional limitation is that these are only users whose first characters are from the latin charset. I plan to add non-Latin names in future releases.