BREAKING NEWS
Singer Whitney Houston has died at the age of 48 ... Read more
Close

Facebook friends 'could be spies'

Last updated 05:00 20/05/2009

Related Links

Facebook hit by hackers Bosses from Hell on Facebook Facebook cracks down on I.P. Freely, Seymour Butts

Relevant offers

Digital living

Go digital to get over an ex Popular app's CEO apologises over privacy bungle Managing a massive music library People not keen to pay for fast broadband extras Facebook will release more user data Hundreds lose money after trader dies PlayStation Network merged with other services Indonesia tweeters fly in the face of censorship Microsoft may ditch start button in W8 Hacker sought $50k for stolen source code

Israel's internal intelligence service has urged its citizens to be careful using Facebook, saying Arabs are trying to recruit spies on the popular social networking site.

The Shin Bet security agency warned Israelis against answering unsolicited messages or sharing telephone numbers and other sensitive information over the internet.

It said there have been numerous incidents recently in which violent groups tried to recruit Israelis through Facebook and other networking sites.

The agency said in one instance an Israeli Facebook user was contacted by a man who introduced himself as a Lebanese agent and offered money for information about Israel.

The Shin Bet said Israelis should be wary of seemingly innocent meetings or dates proposed online by people they don't know. These messages might be posted by militants with intention to kidnap or kill, it said.

"Terror organisations are using these sites to tempt Israelis to meet up in person in order to either abduct them, kill them or recruit them as spies," the Shin Bet said.

An Israeli teenager was killed eight years ago when he was lured to the West Bank by a young woman he met on the internet.

In recent years, militants have turned to the internet to battle Israel. Hamas militants in the Gaza Strip have long been using Google Earth for better precision when firing rockets at southern Israeli cities.

Facebook is open to any person, group or business that wants to sign up for an account. It does prohibit content that is hateful or threatening, and users are barred from doing "anything unlawful, misleading, malicious, or discriminatory."

But, like elsewhere on the internet, Facebook does not hand-screen all the content on the site before it is posted.

Facebook officials did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Two Israeli Arabs were arrested on charges they gave strategic information to the al-Qaida terror network over the Internet last year.

Last year, an Israeli reservist was sentenced to five years in prison for sending e-mails offering to sell secret information to Iran and Hamas.

Israel frequently issues travel warnings to its citizens citing intelligence reports of militant plots to attack and kidnap Israelis.

 

Ad Feedback

- AP

Special offers

Featured Promotions

Sponsored Content