
Hacked data on over 553 million Facebook users was leaked online over the weekend, including names, birthdates, a Facebook user’s relationship status, the city where they live, their workplace, and sometimes even email addresses. But the most sensitive data included in the leak is arguably the phone numbers, which are often used for two-factor authentication. And now there’s a way to easily check if your phone number is in the leak—at least if you live in the U.S.
The website The News Each Day has a simple tool where you can input your phone number and see if it’s in the leak. Gizmodo tested the tool against some data from the actual Facebook leak and found it to be accurate. For example, we tested Mark Zuckerberg’s phone number, which is included in the leak. It worked. (We assume Zuck has changed his phone number by now.)
All you need to do to check is input your phone number without any hyphens or periods. You also need to include the international country code at the beginning. For example, if you’re used to seeing your phone number in this form, 555-212-0000, you should get rid of the hyphens and add the digit “one” in front.
Using the same fake number above, the number you input should look like this: 15552120000. If you include a variation that’s anything but the string of numbers, the tool will falsely tell you that your number is not included in the leak. In reality, it very well could be.

Facebook hasn’t said much about the leak, accept that the info was hacked in 2019. The data was offered in hacking forums for a price two years ago, but the thing that makes this weekend’s leak different is that the data has now been leaked for free. Anyone can find the 16GB of data with just a simple Google search.
DISCUSSION
Is it at all concerning that this The News Each Day thing seems super, super sketchy?
It looks like it’s a news aggregator list, but the About page tells me nothing about who runs it. Googling it (even with quotation marks) produces NO results that point to the site you’ve linked.
Why would I want to run off and plug my phone number into some random website and hope they’re benevolent about it? “I’m not saving the phone number you enter” is hardly an iron-clad policy.
Can we find a useful tool that does the same thing that’s been vetted and hosted on a site someone’s heard of?