Data of over 1.5 billion Facebook users being sold on dark web
Facebook Chairman and CEO Mark Zuckerberg testifies at a House Financial Services Committee hearing in Washington, U.S., Oct. 23, 2019. (Reuters File Photo)


As Facebook, Instagram and WhatsApp users worldwide struggled with a massive outage late Monday, it was reported that the personal information of over 1.5 billion users is being sold on the dark web.

Screenshots found on Twitter show an alleged posting for the sale of personal data of 1.5 billion Facebook users on the dark web, which can only be reached by a special tool known as Tor and is not indexed by surface web search engines such as Google.

The screenshots supposedly taken from a popular dark web forum show a post on the forum that says a database holding more than 1.5 billion users’ information is for sale.

The database was "scraped this year and emails and phone numbers are included as well," the post also reads.

A screenshot allegedly showing a post on the dark web for the sale of over 1.5 billion Facebook users' data.

Another popular post on social media was another screenshot, this time showing that the domain for Facebook is apparently on sale.

A "whois" check on domaintools.com shows that "facebook.com" was indeed, put up for sale.

Screengrab from domaintools.com.

Facebook and its Instagram and WhatsApp platforms were down in parts of the world late Monday.

The company said it was "aware that some people are having trouble accessing Facebook app" and it was working on restoring access.

The company did not say what might be causing the outage, which began around 11:45 a.m. ET (4:45 p.m. GMT). It is normal for websites and apps to suffer outages, though one on a global scale is rare. Users reported being unable to access Facebook in California, New York and Europe.

Facebook is going through a major crisis after the whistleblower who was the source of The Wall Street Journal's series of stories exposing the company's awareness of internal research into the negative effects of its products and decisions went public on "60 Minutes" on Sunday.