YOUR Facebook profile may have been raided by another 200 apps that misused or even sold your personal information, the social media giant revealed in the ongoing fallout from its largest data scandal to date.

Facebook discovered the potentially dodgy applications as part of an “investigation and audit” designed to unearth apps like the personality test that harvested information from users and sold it to political data firm Cambridge Analytica.

Data such as phone numbers, private messages, and religious views, taken from as many as 87 million Facebook users and more than 311,000 in Australia, was allegedly used to influence voters in the 2016 US election.

But that app was not alone in accessing users’ private information, as Facebook product partnerships vice-president Ime Archibong said the company had already identified more suspect creations using its platform.

“We have large teams of internal and external experts working hard to investigate these apps as quickly as possible,” he said in a statement.

“To date, thousands of apps have been investigated and around 200 have been suspended, pending a thorough investigation into whether they did in fact misuse any data.”

Facebook has so far refused to name the suspect apps.

Mr Archibong said if the apps were confirmed as breaking Facebook’s terms, they would be banned from the platform.

The action would be too late for affected users and their friends, however, as information harvested from users could date back to before 2014.

Mr Archibong said Facebook would “show people if they or their friends installed an app that misused data before 2015” at this website, but affected users would not be able to claw that information back.

“There is a lot more work to be done to find all the apps that may have misused people’s Facebook data and it will take time,” Mr Archibong said.

Noah Abelson-Gertler, chief executive of legal rights management firm ShareRoot, said Facebook users should prepare to see more details of privacy abuses in future, and should not assume their data would remain untouched.

“In previous years consumers were not aware of these privacy violations but, because we are beginning to care more, the truth behind unfair and inequitable data practices are being uncovered and shared publicly,” he said.

“This pattern is not going to stop, we are just scratching the surface.”

Facebook remains under investigation by the Office of the Australian Information Commissioner following its data scandal, and faces new regulations, enforceable undertakings, and up to $2.1 million in court-ordered penalties if they are found to have breached Australia’s Privacy Act.