There’s a Hacker Shortage, so Facebook Is Turning to Middle Schools

A man walks past a mural in an office on the Facebook campus in Menlo Park, Calif.

A man walks past a mural in an office on the Facebook campus in Menlo Park, Calif. Jeff Chiu/AP FIle Photo

The tech giant has arranged for hundreds of kids, from middle-school age up, to play a hacking game tit’s developed—because it’s having trouble recruiting for security roles.

Facebook has arranged for hundreds of kids, from middle-school age up, to play a hacking game it’s developed—because it’s having trouble recruiting for security roles.

The company has been arranging competitions using the tool for years, but May 11, it open-sourced the game in the hope of exposing more people—including kids, the Facebookers of the future—to the skills involved in cybersecurity work.

“A software engineer job gets filled in a month,” said Javier Marcos, a security engineer at Facebook. “But a security engineer job gets filled in six, seven months.”

Mark Zuckerberg, Facebook’s founder, is famous for espousing “the hacker way” as a philosophy for life and business.

But is Facebook really comfortable asking middle-schoolers to start imagining ways to break security systems?

“Becoming a hacker is not a bad thing; it’s a person who finds an innovative way to solve a problem,” Marcos said. “But we're not encouraging people to become criminals."

It’s not just Facebook that’s facing a shortage of security engineers. A survey by ISACA, which certifies security professionals, showed that more than half of companies had to wait between three and six months to fill security jobs last year. Some 9 percent of those polled never found a suitable candidate for vacant positions.

Facebook’s game is called Facebook Capture The Flag, and it’s played a little like the classic board game Risk, in which teams compete to control the most territory. The twist is that players must answer questions related to information security, and sometimes hack a website or service, to gain territory.

Now that it’s open source, anyone can organize a session themselves, or contribute to the underlying code. Facebook is also offering cash rewards to people who find bugs in the code.

Facebook started organizing games itself three years ago, even supplying physical equipment, like servers, to make it possible: “At the beginning, we were bringing hardware with us,” Marcos said.

But the game’s popularity meant that demand began outstripping supply, prompting a small team at Facebook to adapt the software into the open-source version it just published.

It’s already had some success as a recruitment channel for the firm: one of the engineers who built the latest version of the game joined after hegot interested in security issues while playing it in college.

“It’s hard to find enough engineers to go to all these places,” said Marjori Pomarole, who works on security infrastructure at Facebook.

The game has proved popular inside Facebook as well. Marcos used a version of it for employees during “Hacktober,” which the company observes every October to raise awareness about security issues. The game, with a leaderboard that everyone in the company can see, turned the normally tepid engagement on security topics into a fierce competition, with 8,000 staffers taking part.

Marcos hid made-up bugs for players to find, but employees were so intent on rooting them out that some actual flaws in the infrastructure of Facebook itself were discovered in the process. The eventual winner, an employee in Dublin, racked up over 10,000 points, about three times more than his nearest rival.

“People were going crazy, reporting every single thing they could find,” Marcos said.

The winner received the grand prize, a T-shirt bearing the Hacktober logo:

Facebook’s Hacktober logo.(Facebook)