Russian cybercriminal forums offer batches of 1,000 Twitter accounts for less than $200.

Hacked Twitter accounts are selling briskly on Russian cybercriminal forums, with fraud artists and spammers paying between $100 and $200 for batches of 1,000 accounts, depending on number of followers the accounts have, according to a Russian security researcher.

Credit: Twitter

In many cases the buyers are conducting a lucrative trade by hawking phony antivirus products via tweets sent through these accounts. “The technique of stealing account credentials and posting malicious links on Twitter is more and more popular,” and has surged in the past two months, says Costin Raiu, director of the global research and analysis group for the Moscow-based antivirus company Kaspersky Lab. “Cybercriminals are recognizing that social networking sites can be abused very efficiently for their needs.”

Even one successful hacked tweet from the account of a trusted user can have serious repercussions, especially if the bogus tweet is “retweeted” by followers to still more people. Typically, between 10 percent and 20 percent of people will click a link sent by a trusted source.

The illicit Twitter trade is being conducted on Russian-language, members-only cybercriminal forums, Raiu says. No aggregate numbers of stolen accounts are available. But based on the fact that accounts are offered in batches of 1,000, it’s reasonable to conclude that tens of thousands or more accounts might be for sale worldwide, Raiu says. Twitter has more than 75 million members, of which about 10 million to 15 million send out tweets regularly.

In one common scam, clicking the link of a hacked tweet infects the recipient’s computer with advertisements for a phony antivirus product. The infection produces a pop-up notice that announces an infection and offers the “full version” of the antivirus solution for $50 or more. One in 100 people likely end up paying for this, Raiu estimates, roughly a 50 to 1 return on investment.

The Twitter scam is built on the theft of login credentials through long-established tricks including password-stealing viruses, called Trojans, and through spam e-mails that trick recipients into entering their credentials into a fake version of Twitter.com. Once access to an account is obtained, the hacker probably gets only a few shots at sending a fake tweet before the owner notices and changes his credentials.

Tweet scam A message sent through a compromised Twitter account by a hacker (highlighted in red). The message includes a link that leads to malware.
Credit: Twitter

Twitter advises that users who see unauthorized tweets issued under their name should change their password immediately (if it hasn’t been changed by the hacker) and to revoke access for any unrecognized third-party application. It also offers advice for safe tweeting on its forums. The company did not immediately reply to a question about the Russian black market or the number of compromised accounts.

The discovery by Kaspersky Lab comes one month after reports surfaced that Facebook was facing similar problems. Verisign’s iDefense Labs said it had found a website peddling 1.5 million compromised Facebook accounts, offering them for $25 per 1,000 accounts with 10 friends or less, and $45 per 1,000 accounts that have more than 10 friends.

The hacking of Twitter accounts represents a change in strategy by Twitter scam artists. Earlier this year, the trend among spammers was to create Twitter accounts from scratch, try to gain as many followers as possible, then attempt to sell them, with prices listed on Russian cybercriminal forums of between $500 and $1,000.

But this strategy found few customers, and proved difficult to maintain. Twitter fought back by blocking accounts that gathered followers too quickly–a sign that a spammer was behind the account. Scammers next built automated programs to slowly build up followers and post realistic-looking tweets copied from other Twitter users.

“It was a lot of work for them,” Raiu says. “Probably the cybercriminals discovered earlier this year that it’s easier to steal logins to people’s Twitter accounts than create them from scratch.”

Source: http://www.technologyreview.com/web/25297/page2/

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2 Responses to “Russian cybercriminal forums offer batches of 1,000 Twitter accounts for less than $200.”

  1. Leah says:

    Theres 4 points i would like people to see.

    Authentication
    Authorisation
    Hacked
    Compromised

    Once a user is authenticated….and this is the the if the user is then authorised to perform whatever actions that security level provides. Ie selling 1billion of shares instead of 1 million etc.
    Authentications takes the form of passwords,fingerprints, facial recognition. As a help for you Password authentication was cracked 20 years ago for most cryptographic systems…By this is mean every combination of passwords you can ever enter is stored on a large database and takes milliseconds to hack a password. Even a moderately powerful computer today given an encrypted password can crack every password in the world pretty quickly.

    Hacked is a simple flaw in a piece of software accessible to outside influence.

    Compromised is (e.g.) an authenticated channel between 2 systems that is then used online by someone or offline by a trojan to perform actions like taking all your money out of your account and sending it to theirs…all whilst youre logged in and unaware. You passed the tests for authentication/authorisation however it was hacked without your knowledge and a package was left behind. So what can you do….the answer is easy never/ever use a computer.

    Can we achieve 100% authentication…

    as you saw above even 100% authentication doesnt help in the real-world in fact it makes things WORSE..much WORSE cause you are then trusting a compromised environment.

    Is there a real-solution or solutions…
    Yes but you’ll never get the “IT experts” putting them forward cause theyre a bunch of dufus’

    Actually scrub that I believe i came across a TRUE IT expert some 10-20 years ago, and his proposal still holds true today…

    Now wheres that mirror gone.

  2. Romy says:

    It is extremely important to realize that issues that are hypersensitive as ideas being muted by both Facebook and Mozzilla,specifically, password security and privacy issues,ought not to be treated so lightly as contained in the news report,or left in the hands of the two enterprises alone The trend of web based applications is very broad, to the extent, 10-20 years from now, human life and conduct of day to day activities will dramatically be impacted by electronic and
    computer based applications.

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