FaceUBook.com – Facebook’s evil twin

Facebook / Social Media

I got a message from a friend of mine on Facebook. The message told me to check out a particular blog on AOL. I clicked on a link and ended up briefly on the AOL blog site…

…but then that page refreshed and I saw this.

Why would Facebook be asking me to reenter my password?

I glanced the URL bar and this is what I saw:

it wasn’t Facebook.com. It was FaceuBook.com!

It turns out this was a phishing site. It fools users into re-entering their Facebook username and password. It then sends messages to everyone in your Friends list asking them to check out a particular blog.

When they do, the process repeats itself.

In addition to causing a lot of embarrassment and hassle to your friends, the jerk behind this scam also gets access to all your personal info.

I hope Facebook.com takes some action against FaceUBook.com, shuts down this domain and figures out how to keep these scams from affecting innocent users.

In the meantime, when entering passwords on sites like Facebook, PayPal etc, don’t forget to check your address bar to make sure you’re on the legit site.

8 Comments

  1. 18 October 08, 8:19am

    omg i got that
    andi go to my friend

    why the heck didi t bring me there???

    and she signed off…

    so its a hacker thing right?

    i didnt put my stuff in but if i did wat would of happened?

  2. Jessica
    18 October 08, 3:54pm

    Thank you so much! I almost fell into that trap, but luckily I was suspicious when the site redirected itself. I noticed that it was Faceubook.com, and I am so glad I did! I also told all my friends about it, so hopefully they won’t fall into that trap as well.
    PS-I also think that it does more than just send out automatic messages to all your friends, because I also got an IM from the person that sent me the original message saying something about a Macy’s giftcard.

  3. 20 October 08, 2:31am

    [...] found out from this post at Mind Valley Labs of a really nasty phishing website that clones the login page for Facebook. The site will show the [...]

  4. 06 November 08, 7:35am

    [...] a crucial role for brands in ultimately validating the platform. Â With phishing sites like “Faceubook” already popping up, it will take consumer trust in brands to permit Facebook Connect’s [...]

  5. 19 November 08, 9:24pm

    Thank you
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  6. 16 February 09, 3:36am

    Great info. I didn’t receive anything like this yet. At least now that I know about it, I can avoid it and inform my friends. Thanks.

  7. 26 September 10, 6:06am

    I appreciate reading these posts becuase they assist me in the flash or shockwave games developing that I do quite a lot of, it’s a dissapointment all the spam that these websites are beginning to get though, they should sort.

  8. 30 November 10, 3:55pm

    I most certenly like your innovative angle that you have on the topic. Certainly wasn’t planning on this at the time I started browsing for tips. Your ideas was totally simple to understand. Happy to find out that there’s an person here that obviously understands exactly what its is talking about.

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