It all started when she received a private message from what she thought was one of her friends. But the friend had been hacked, and when she clicked on a link her account was hacked as well.
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"They immediately changed the recovery, phone number and email so that, whoever's account, they cannot recover their account," said Eisenstadt.
She said the hackers then sent out this message to her friends. It claims she made money using Bitcoin and urging them to invest.
"They start private messaging each of my friends, 5,000 people, one at a time saying that they're me and soliciting my friends, family everyone to invest in this Bitcoin mining page," she said.
Eisenstadt said as soon as she noticed what was happening, she tried contacting Facebook.
She's gone through the procedure to recover her account, but it feels like she's going around in circles.
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"Facebook has absolutely no way to reach them. There's absolutely no customer support to talk to a person to resolve this," according to Eisenstadt.
"They automate so many processes, so many of the things that you're able to change with your account, and often times these are critical things that become difficult to undo," said Dr. Clifford Neuman a professor of Computer Science from USC. "You reach out to the company, you try to get that personalized customer service and you wait months and months before you are at the head of the queue, and that makes it almost impossible to correct these kinds of intrusions."
We sent an email to Facebook to get a statement about this but so far we haven't heard back. Eisenstadt said she wonders if she will ever get her account back.
"I communicate to my friends or my family through this media, I communicate to patients who need my help through this medium, and I didn't realize how important it was to me until I lost it," said Eisenstadt.