instagramlogoA security researcher found a flaw in Instagram's website that caused thousands of users' email addresses and phone numbers to be exposed online for several weeks, it was revealed on Thursday.

David Stier, a data scientist and business consultant, told CNET the website source code for some Instagram user profiles included the account holder's contact information whenever it loaded in a web browser.

Although the contact information was available in Instagram's mobile app if users chose to reveal it in their profile, it was never displayed on the desktop version of the Instagram website, so it's unclear why the details were exposed.

The leaked contacts are said to have come from thousands of accounts belonging to private individuals, including minors, as well businesses and brands. Stier alerted Instagram to the problem shortly after discovering it in February, and the photo-focused social platform issued a patch in March.

According to Stier, including the details in the source code could have let hackers scrape the data from the website relatively easily and use it to compile a database listing the contact information of thousands of Instagram users.

A similar data haul may have already occurred. On Monday it was revealed that a database containing contact information for millions of Instagram influencers, celebrities, and brand accounts had been leaked online.

The records included public data pulled from Instagram, such as profile picture, biography, and follower numbers, but also private contact information like phone numbers and email addresses.

The database was initially uploaded and shared by Mumbai-based social media marketing firm Chtrbox, a company that pays Instagram influencers to share sponsored content. Though uploaded by Chtrbox, the database included info from influencers who have never worked with the company.

In a statement, Chtrbox said the information in its database wasn't private and that it didn't source the information through unethical means.

Instagram parent company Facebook said on Monday that it was investigating the Chtrbox database. "We're also inquiring with Chtrbox to understand where this data came from and how it became publicly available," said Facebook.

A similar privacy befell the social media platform in August 2017, when a bug related to an Instagram API allowed hackers to breach multiple high-profile Instagram accounts belonging to celebrities.

Top Rated Comments

jsmith189 Avatar
84 months ago
Our weekly failure by Facebook.
Score: 10 Votes (Like | Disagree)
itsmilo Avatar
84 months ago
I don’t get why the EU isn’t doing anything about Facebook or Instagram. Usually they r up on everyone’s a$$. I guess lobbying is a hell of a thing
Score: 4 Votes (Like | Disagree)
sshambles Avatar
84 months ago
Instagram: We’re sorry. We’ll try harder to protect your privacy.

Everyone sane: *begins taking bets on how long until the next privacy issue is discovered*
Score: 4 Votes (Like | Disagree)
windywalks Avatar
84 months ago
What the hell do they use as a security measure, a Trapper Keeper!?
Score: 2 Votes (Like | Disagree)
0815 Avatar
84 months ago
as usual not surprising ....

By now everyone should know that those big cooperations care more about ad revenue and sale of personal data then about protecting the privacy of their user base - there is just no money in protecting the privacy and apparently users still stick with them - so no harm done in their view point.
Score: 2 Votes (Like | Disagree)
jtara Avatar
84 months ago
The article is a bit jumbled on details, so hard to understand exactly what is going on. By "web site source code", I assume they mean HTML. But could be buried in some Javascript or retrieved using Ajax and then inserted into the DOM. Probably in a hidden element, hidden input, in a data- attribute, etc.

I am not at all surprised, though.

I am one of a small handful of developers who still answer questions on the jQuery developer forums. jQuery is a popular but rapidly-fading Javascript library that was created primarily to "normalize" the differences between browsers so that devs don't have to code "if this browser, do this, if that browser do that...". Instead, jQuery provides it's own API and if you use their API then it deals with the differences between browser. Rapidly becoming a Thing That Is Not Needed.

Anyhoo, I am shocked at the low level of competency on the part of the (almost always overseas) frontend devs for major Fortune 500 companies. Like, for example, the web site for a major U.S. cell phone provider that I shall not name. You'll have to cycle through the alphabet to guess, but you won't have to go very far. ;)

So, first off, how do I know that they are working for major Fortune 500 companies? Because they've repeatedly failed to reduce their examples to the minimum needed to show the problem, and just post links to their development site - which is typically open to the Internet with no security. If somebody is willing to help them, they will have to dig through mountains of code - like 50 or more JS files being loaded, with redundant plugins left by the previous devs who were hired to do Just One Thing and then moved on to other jobs for other companies. They just keep adding layer after layer of crap. And another dozen tracking scripts, etc.

Anyway, there's their logo, and say an order form for for service, or for the latest iPhone or whatnot, and they've posted a link to their example page and usually it's accessible without a password, though sometimes it needs one, which of course they post openly in an open forum.

So, I COMMONLY see things like price calculators that are being relied-upon by the backend (they have inadvertently created their very own "name your own price tool"!), and it's not uncommon for the devs to not understand that Javascript running in a browser is NO MEASURE OF SECURITY. The only reason anyone should be doing any kind of price calculations or form validations in a web page is as a convenience to the user, to avoid a trip back and forth to the server. Where the validations MUST be done again, but often never are.

It is very common to see posted PHP, C# code, etc. often with no understanding on the part of the dev that we can't help them with that - it's a jQuery forum, not a forum for some random server language. And, at the same time, no understanding that, say, the PHP code runs on the server, and the Javascript code runs in the browser. Chalk that up to the awful historical design of PHP where you can (you don't HAVE to, and this style is discouraged today) mix server and browser code in the same file. It's not uncommon for these devs to just not get it that the server is treating their file as a template, and generates HTML on the server to send to the browser, and the generated HTML (generated by the PHP code) is sent rather than the PHP.

Since we often see PHP/C#/Cold Fusion/whatever code, that means we also see their (common) SQL injection vulnerabilities and other horrors of poor or no security in server code.

I can see the described leakage easily happening because a dev made a query that returned columns that should never have been included in the page and/or the dev somehow thought there's no issue with including some extra data that "the user will never see". You know, because it is "hidden". Hidden, yes, to the casual user, but not to anybody who knows how to use the web inspection/debugging tools present in every desktop browser. Or to a scraper/crawler, which is not limited to seeing just the "visible" elements on a page.

Somebody "might have made a copy". No, it is certain that somebody made a copy. There are certainly multiple copies of the data now in scrapers archives, and they probably do not even know what they have. A scraper is just a robot - it will scrape whatever it finds and squirrel it away. Probably later, an algorithm or a human will comb through it to see what might be "interesting".

Front-end development practices, as done by many top companies, is just absolute crap. The companies piece it out to the cheapest bidder, and there is often no continuity. It gets handed off from one developer to another and again and again and again, and each adds their own layer of crap and leaves their own footprints to the mess.

Beyond that, it is OBVIOUS that many of these devs are getting their information from 10-20 year-old books (which is why I now dispose of old development books rather than them them to a charity store), outdated blogs and tutorial sites, etc. Search engines and SEO have a surprising influence on this, BTW. Because sites that work their way to the top continue to stay there for many years after they have ceased to be useful. There are so many "frozen" dev tutorial sites that just have obsolete information but were once the top reference, and the search engines do a poor job of "expiring" their rankings.

I have to admit, I often Google for answers. But I CHECK THE EXPIRATION DATE. Usually I will include a data constraint in my searches and then check any dates in the blog or tutorial, etc. to insure I am getting fresh results, and not some 10-year-old advice. You don't know how many of these devs I have to point toward MDN, CSS-Tricks, jQuery Learning Center (on the VERY SAME SITE they are posting on...) and they had no clue that these sites existed and are the best references on the development they are doing.

What this researcher uncovered is just the tip of the iceberg. It is not an anomaly. It is endemic.

Edit: It's probably not fair to place the blame on front-end developers. Much of it can be blamed on the scourge known as "full-stack development". This is the fantasy that one person can do it all - front end, back end, database, security, etc. So, you have devs that know a little bit of that, a little bit of that, much of it outdated. As well as the fantasy that developers are fungible - you can just pass off bits and pieces of functionality to whatever random dev is available or can be hired the cheapest from an online virtual sweat-shop to implement a feature and you will somehow magically wind-up with something coherent.

And that, my friends is how sausage.... er, many of the highest profile websites - are too often made.
Score: 2 Votes (Like | Disagree)

Popular Stories

Apple Logo Spotlight

Report: Apple to Launch These New Products in 2026

Sunday November 2, 2025 5:34 am PST by
Apple is planning to launch at least 15 new products in 2026, according to Bloomberg's Mark Gurman. Gurman outlined what to expect from Apple in 2026 in the latest edition of his "Power On" newsletter. He said the company is heading "into one of its most pivotal years in recent memory," with the rollout of major new Apple Intelligence features, intense regulatory pressure on the App Store,...
ios 26 1 slide to stop

iOS 26.1 Brings Back 2007 Feature in New Way

Friday October 31, 2025 1:40 pm PDT by
The upcoming iOS 26.1 update includes a small but helpful change for iPhones, and it could prevent you from running late to something important. Specifically, when an alarm goes off in the Clock app, there is a new "slide to stop" control on the screen for turning off the alarm. On previous iOS 26 versions, there is simply a large "stop" button, which could be accidentally tapped. The new ...
Apple Intelligence General Feature 2

New Version of Siri to 'Lean' on Google Gemini

Sunday November 2, 2025 6:06 am PST by
In his "Power On" newsletter, Bloomberg's Mark Gurman today provided an update on the status of Apple Intelligence and the plans for it in 2026. Apple is still planning to roll out its revamped version of Siri around March of next year. The release should be accompanied by the release of a new smart home display product with speaker-base and wall-mount options. A new Apple TV and HomePod...
HomePod mini and Apple TV

New Apple TV and HomePod Mini Likely Launching Soon

Sunday November 2, 2025 5:49 am PST by
A new Apple TV and HomePod mini could launch as soon as this month, Bloomberg's Mark Gurman today suggested. In today's "Power On" newsletter, Gurman said that Apple retail stores are planning an overnight refresh on the evening of November 11, where changes will be made after closing, such as refreshing displays and placing new products for the following day. The timing of the overnight...
Apple Foldable Thumb

iPhone Fold: Launch, Pricing, and What to Expect From Apple's Foldable

Friday October 31, 2025 8:52 am PDT by
Apple is expected to launch a new foldable iPhone next year, based on multiple rumors and credible sources. The long-awaited device has been rumored for years now, but signs increasingly suggest that 2026 could indeed be the year that Apple releases its first foldable device. Below, we've collated an updated set of key details that have been leaked about Apple's foldable iPhone so far. Ove...
M5 MacBook Pro

Waiting for New Macs? Apple Just Shared Bad News

Friday October 31, 2025 7:32 am PDT by
Apple has just given a strong indication that it will not be releasing any additional new Macs for the remainder of the year. Apple's CFO Kevan Parekh dropped the hint during the company's earnings call on Thursday:On Mac, keep in mind, we expect to face a very difficult compare against the M4 MacBook Pro, Mac mini, and iMac launches in the year-ago quarter.Parekh essentially gave a heads up ...
iOS 26

Apple Releases iOS 26.1 With Liquid Glass Toggle, Slide to Stop Alarm, New Apple Intelligence Languages and More

Monday November 3, 2025 1:11 pm PST by
Apple today released iOS 26.1, the first major update to the iOS 26 operating system that came out in September, iOS 26.1 comes over a month after iOS 26 launched. ‌iOS 26‌.1 is compatible with the ‌iPhone‌ 11 series and later, as well as the second-generation ‌iPhone‌ SE. The new software can be downloaded on eligible iPhones over-the-air by going to Settings > General >...
iOS 26

6 New Things Your iPhone Can Do in iOS 26.1

Wednesday October 29, 2025 4:22 am PDT by
Apple is about to drop iOS 26.1, the first major point release since iOS 26 was rolled out in September, and there are at least six notable changes and improvements to look forward to. We've rounded them up below. Apple has already provided developers and public beta testers with the release candidate version of iOS 26.1, which means Apple will likely roll out the update to all compatible...
Early Black Friday Deals 2

The Best Early Black Friday Apple Deals

Sunday November 2, 2025 10:04 am PST by
We're officially in the month of Black Friday, which will take place on Friday, November 28 in 2025. As always, this will be the best time of the year to shop for great deals, including popular Apple products like AirPods, iPad, Apple Watch, and more. In this article, the majority of the discounts will be found on Amazon. Note: MacRumors is an affiliate partner with some of these vendors. When ...