Abstract Recent actions by social media platforms have sparked a new debate on the privacy of users.
There have been reports of user data being sold to third parties and personal data being
accessed for advertising purposes with or without their consent. A new wave of security
threats is also coming up and is breeding on social media platforms. Social engineering has
grown to be a formidable security threat due to the amounts of data that users are posting on
social media platforms. Hackers do not need to search deeply for data that they can use in
order to attack users. Attackers lurking on social media platforms or ganging up with the
revenue-focused social media platforms have made it hard for social media users to continue
enjoying these platforms free of worries.
In response to this, this research has studied the ways in which social media platforms are
inherently putting users in the way of security and privacy threats. It has hypothesized that
social media platforms are the culprits of increasing security and privacy threats that users are
facing and research has been conducted to prove the same. In the results, it has been observed
that users are increasingly getting wary of their security online due to social media platforms.
From secondary data sources, it has also been found that there are many social media users
who are exposed to security and privacy risks but are unaware. Based on the findings of the
primary and secondary data, the research has formulated some recommendations that it hopes
will reduce the security and privacy issues that users are facing on social media. The
recommendations are aimed at making users more secure, encouraging government
participation in regulating social media platforms, and urging social media platforms to give
users more control over their privacy.