Tag Archives: bots

How Fraudulent Advertising Could Be Costly to Your Company

Your company may be losing money because of online advertising. Beyond the success of advertisements when it comes to converting marketing budgets into sales, a singular type of cyberattack threatens to directly affect your company’s accounts.

Namely, there exist networks of bots that are used to inflate the number of clicks that ads receive. These botnets enable fraudsters to manipulate web advertising metrics, which in turn leads advertisers to pay more than what they should for legitimate clicks.

A recent study reveals the worrying consequences of this subtle kind of fraud. All over the world it has already cost businesses more than $7 billion, bloating advertising figures spectacularly and making up 11% of banner impressions and 23% of video advertisement impressions.

The main problem of this cyberattack in relation to other threats on the web — such as phishing and ransomware — is that it goes completely unnoticed. After infecting devices, cybercriminals are able to discreetly redirect traffic to simulate ad clicks. Since these are real devices owned by real people, advertisers are unaware that behind their ads’ success lies an army of bots.

So, it seems like nipping the problem in the bud may be complicated (at least from the advertiser’s perspective, who is billed according to these metrics, rigged as they may be). However, there are several things that companies can do, such as using quality advertising platforms that offer certain guarantees and that have demonstrated their willingness to persecute those responsible for these botnets.

Beyond that, it’s important to use ad metrics to check the duration of the visit to the webpage and the geographic location from which the supposed clicks are originating. This could be used to expose the fraud. Visitors that enter the page for only a fraction of a second or that do so from a faraway country that has little reason to be interested in the product will, most likely, be infected devices in the botnet.

The same thing happens with botnets used to make social network ad campaigns more expensive. These campaigns are likely orchestrated by a competitor with the intention of making advertising more expensive. In fact, they are relatively easy to track. If a wave of phantom followers appears out of the blue (without profile photo and with strange names), it most likely fraudulent.

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That no-good-Tinder-match wants to steal your money!

pandasecurity-tinder-botsMillions of people have been virtually stood-up by a potential partner that swiped left on the dating service, Tinder. To swipe left or swipe right—a decision made in an instant—is love in the times of the Smartphone…or so we think.

 

There is something that we didn’t take into account while using Tinder to find our future soulmates: many of our matches, and potential hook-ups, are actually robots that want to take us for all we’re worth. And unfortunately, these scammers are getting better and better at what they do.

 

Once they have established contact with their victim, the scammers use Tinder’s chat service to message their victim a link that will lead them outside of the app, usually to a premium service that takes users to a payment area (or any area where they may have to submit credit card credentials).

 

A seemingly less-dangerous variant of this scam encourages the victim to download some type of software, so that the bot’s creator can pocket some change for every visitor they deceive. In the worst cases, the download will contain a malicious code that might infect the victim’s phone.

Your “match” will lead you to a premium service area where you will have to pass through a payment page.

 

How can I detect them?

 

You will be able to recognize these scammers by the type of actions they attempt to carry out, like asking you to exit the app to an external private chat, tempt you with a better “glimpse of them” by asking you to pay for “their” videos or photos, or even try to play a game with you to see if you can beat them. They might attempt the classic “Nigerian Prince” illusion, and ask for a money transfer so they can buy a ticket to come see you, since they are so far away.

You can recognize these robots by the appealing yet limited phrases they use

 

You can also recognize the Tinder bots by their profile photos. The scammers use photos of models and actors from the internet, sometimes from pornographic pages, to attract their victims. If the procedure is automated, the language used will be very limited…whatever you say, the response will be similar. If you find anything like this, be suspicious!

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