- Buy Microsoft Visio Professional or Microsoft Project Professional 2024 for just $80
- Get Microsoft Office Pro and Windows 11 Pro for 87% off with this bundle
- Buy or gift a Babbel subscription for 78% off to learn a new language - new low price
- Join BJ's Wholesale Club for just $20 right now to save on holiday shopping
- This $28 'magic arm' makes taking pictures so much easier (and it's only $20 for Black Friday)
#Infosec2024: Third of Web Traffic Comes from Malicious Bots
Malicious bots are a scourge for organizations with an online presence, and AI will likely increase this threat, Nigel Bridges, CEO of Veracity Trust Network, said during Infosecurity Europe 2024.
Veracity observed that, in 2022, almost 50% of all web traffic came from bots rather than humans, of which over 30% were malicious bots.
“As a result, every organization’s online reach goes down and its cyber risks go up,” Bridges added.
From Breaking Websites to Gathering Data
Today, malicious bots are able to perform a wide range of nefarious activities, including:
- Breaking websites
- Planting ransomware
- Compromising and stealing content and personal/confidential data
- Gathering information that might be useful in future attacks
“All industry verticals are targeted,” said Bridges, showing the audience an extensive list of examples of damaging bot activities targeting different sectors.
For example, bots targeting financial services tend to perform actions like account takeover, card cracking and content scraping, while those targeting the automotive industry traditionally perform price and data scraping and inventory checking.
Additionally, although malicious bots used to be used by cybercriminals primarily, nation-state actors are now employing bots for cyber espionage purposes.
Bridges added that both cybercriminal and nation-state groups also started leveraging AI to scale bot automation.
Current Bot Protection Fails
According to Bridges, malicious bots are difficult to detect and stop because of the way current bot protection tools work.
“Current malicious bots bypass cyber protections increasingly easily, partly because bot defense systems tend to work in the server – also known as the ‘edge’ – and not in the browser.
Additionally, they tend to detect bot activity depending on known patterns and historical data, an approach that has proved ineffective. Bot protection tools need to work in the browser and assess the minutia of visitor behavior to catch them all,” he explained.