Former Meta Employee Probed for Accessing 30,000 Private Facebook Photos
A former Meta employee is the subject of a criminal probe after being accused of allegedly accessing and downloading roughly 30,000 private Facebook images while employed at the company. The case has drawn the attention of the Metropolitan Police's cybercrime unit, which is investigating how the images were accessed, whether they were shared or otherwise misused, and what internal safeguards may have failed. Meta has not publicly detailed the scope of its internal review, and the probe centers on both the individual actions and broader questions about employee access to user content.
The incident underscores a larger pattern in data security: internal actors are a frequent source of compromise, responsible for about 30% of data breaches in recent industry reporting, and breaches carry heavy financial and reputational costs — the global average cost of a data breach reached $4.45 million in 2023. Facebook's past exposure, including the 2021 leak of personal data tied to 533 million users, has already heightened scrutiny of the company's handling of sensitive information and amplified calls for stronger technical protections.
Public reaction on social media has been sharply critical and alarmed. Privacy advocates have seized on the case to argue for stronger safeguards such as end-to-end encryption — which would prevent employees from accessing user content even internally — while commentators and creators have expressed sarcasm and distrust, likening Meta's data stewardship to handing valuables to a pickpocket. Photography and privacy outlets have also warned users about the risks of storing intimate images on social platforms, and experts say the episode will likely fuel regulatory and user demands for tighter internal controls, clearer audit trails, and technical measures that limit employee access to private data.
📊 Relevant Data
Approximately 30% of all data breaches involve internal actors, according to the Verizon DBIR 2025.
Insider Threat Statistics [2026]: 45+ Facts on Cost & Risk — StationX
The global average cost of a data breach reached $4.45 million in 2023, marking a 15% increase over three years.
Facebook has a history of multiple data breaches, including a 2021 incident where personal data of 533 million users was exposed on an online forum.
Facebook Data Breaches: Full Timeline Through 2023 — Firewall Times
📌 Key Facts
- Former Meta employee in London allegedly wrote a script to bypass internal safeguards and access roughly 30,000 private Facebook images
- Meta says it discovered the improper access over a year ago, fired the employee, notified users, referred the matter to police and enhanced security measures
- The Metropolitan Police cybercrime unit is conducting a criminal investigation, and the UK Information Commissioner’s Office has acknowledged the incident
📰 Source Timeline (1)
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