The social media giant has launched a "one-click tool for people in Afghanistan to quickly lock down their account."
“We also temporarily removed the ability to view and search the ‘Friends’ list for Facebook accounts in Afghanistan to help protect people from being targeted,” Gleicher wrote on his Twitter page on late Thursday.
He called on users not from Afghanistan to tighten their visibility settings in order to protect their friends from the Central Asian nation.
"When their profile is locked, people who aren’t their friends can’t download or share their profile photo or see posts on their timeline," Gleicher noted.
Apart from "working closely with our counterparts in industry, civil society and government" to address the security issue of Afghan accounts, Gleicher also announced that the company created a "special operations center" to respond to the occurring issues.
The Taliban entered Kabul on August 15, ending a weeks-long offensive that resulted in the collapse of the US-backed government.
Facebook has banned the Taliban from using its services and deletes content with their propaganda. In turn, on Tuesday, the spokesman for the movement, Zabihullah Mujahid, accused Facebook of breaching the Islamist group's right to free expression by banning them from all of its platforms.
*The Taliban, a terrorist group banned in Russia and a number of other countries