No, this is not a problem at all, I think you are worrying for nothing.
There are no security issues that you need to worry about yourself, the loaded page in the iframe is sandboxed, and is "guarded" by the browser.
The two iframes can't even communicate with one another since they are not sharing the same domain, and modern browsers will block any attempt to execute javascript code in another frame if the two frames have different domain.
The thing that facebook did was to workaround that problem, each iframe app in facebook loads the facebook javascript sdk which then enables the nested iframe to make requests to facebook and be notified (by callbacks) when the data returns.
As for "malware javascript code inside iframe to attack user computer via browser", the iframe has the same exact security policies enforced by the browser as any other browser page, if someone manages to somehow bypass those policies then it has little difference where it's loaded, and facebook are not enforcing any other security measures.
The only thing you need to worry about is that scripts inside the iframe will be able to access your scripts and/or dom, which should not happen unless you create a machnism which will let them (somehow bypass the cross-domain policy).