Stole his account on Facebook with a…

A hacker managed to gain access to a user account…
of the Facebook with the use of a forged passport
The illegal access to the account on the Facebook by a third party revealed recently a user of the social networking website, when it realised that the codes had been changed without his knowledge.
O hacker managed to gain access to the user account of the user Aaron Thompson on Facebook just by sending to the support team of the company the image of a fake passport. With this move, the Facebook gave the hackers access to the personal and professional pages of Thompson.
In particular, Thompson, who resides in Michigan, USA, began to perceive the chain of events that led to the violation of the account from an email received from Facebook with the subject “Description of problem”.
In the original email that was sent to Facebook was written the following request: “Hi. I no longer have access to the mobile number of my phone. Can you please disable the code generator and the connection authorization from my account? Thank you.”
Fact, however, is that the email was not sent from Thompson but from the hackers, who but didn’t have access to the email address, or passwords.
The Facebook replied to the fake email advising the scammer to send a photo or copy of his identity in order “to confirm that he is the person with that account”.
The hacker did what was asked of him and a little later, Thompson received another email from Facebook with a scanned image of a counterfeit passport and the answer: “Thank you that you have confirmed your identity. You should now be able to log in to your account”.
Once the hacker managed to gain access to the account of Thompson’s, deleted all the administrators of the site and sent to the fiancée of the victim a picture of his genitals!
This was the straw that broke the camel’s back for Thompson, who took action and forwarded the email again to the support team of Facebook telling them that he is the real owner of the account and that the previous e-mail messages, including this one containing the image with the fake passport, they were not sent by him but by someone proficient.
Some time later, Facebook restored the “problem” and has apologised to Thompson.