Releases.

Burp Bounty Pro releases

|best| — Facebook Password Giveaway

The prize isn't real. The lockout is. Stay safe, enable 2FA, and think before you comment.

| Feature | Scam "Password Giveaway" | Legitimate "Password Giveaway" | | :--- | :--- | :--- | | | Requests your Facebook password, OTPs, bank details, or an upfront "fee." | Requests a discovered password, code, or answer to a puzzle question. | | The Prize | Vague or "too good to be true" (e.g., $1,000 for a click). | Clearly described and realistic, often related to the brand. | | The Source | A page with few followers, misspellings, no verification, or a cloned identity. | A verified page or well-known brand with a history of legitimate engagement. | | The Urgency | Extreme, with statements like "Act now! Last chance!" | Fair, with a clear start and end date, but no high-pressure tactics. | | Contact Method | Unsolicited DMs from hacked friends, or comments with suspicious links. | Official page posts or website announcements. |

Before interacting with any giveaway, stop. Does it look legitimate? Have you heard of the brand before? Take a moment to assess. Facebook Password Giveaway

Always inspect the address bar of your browser. If a page looks like Facebook but the URL reads something like facebook-lucky-draw-2026.com , login-verification.net , or uses obscure domains, it is a fraud.

Surveys of scam victims indicate:

To maintain security, users must adopt a mindset of "zero trust" regarding their credentials. A strong password—ideally a long, random passphrase of at least 12–16 characters—should be treated as a private key that never leaves the owner's possession. Legitimate organizations, including Facebook, will never ask for a password through a third-party link or for a "giveaway". Security measures like Two-Factor Authentication (2FA) provide an essential second layer of protection, ensuring that even if a password is compromised, the account remains out of reach for unauthorized users.

If you're looking for something else, please provide more context so I can assist you better. The prize isn't real

Post on other platforms or text your close friends to let them know your Facebook account was compromised, warning them not to click any links sent from your profile. Final Thoughts: The Golden Rule of Online Safety

Never reuse your Facebook password on other websites.Make it at least 12 characters long with letters, numbers, and symbols. Run an Antivirus Scan | Feature | Scam "Password Giveaway" | Legitimate

The “Facebook Password Giveaway” is a deceptive social engineering tactic prevalent on social media platforms. Scammers lure users with promises of rewards, verification badges, or prizes in exchange for their login credentials. This paper examines the mechanics of such scams, their psychological underpinnings, documented consequences, and effective countermeasures. Understanding this threat is critical for individual users and organizational cybersecurity.

When you hand over your password in a giveaway, you aren't just losing a login. You are giving a criminal the keys to your digital identity.

Burp Bounty Pro v2.6.2

You can download the latest Burp Bounty Pro version 2.6.2 at: Changelog: Added the functionality to export the Burpsuite scope to a .zip file to

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