10-23-2021 , 10:35 PM
https://therecord.media/google-unmasks-t...ujcnBszQpl Catalin Cimpanu October 21, 2021
Google unmasks two-year-old phishing & malware campaign targeting YouTube users More than 4,000 YouTube accounts hijacked in two-year-old phishing campaign.
Youtube creators were tricked with offers for business collaborations.
Hijacked accounts were sold on underground marketplaces for prices ranging from $20 to $10,000.
Almost two years after a wave of complaints flooded Google’s support forums about YouTube accounts getting hijacked even if users had two-factor authentication enabled, Google’s security team has finally tracked down the root cause of these attacks.
In a report published today, the Google Threat Analysis Group (TAG) attributed these incidents to “a group of hackers recruited in a Russian-speaking forum.”
TAG said the hackers operated by reaching out to victims via email with various types of business opportunities.
YouTubers were typically lured with potential sponsorship deals. Victims were asked to install and test various applications and then publish a review.
Apps typically used in these schemes involved antivirus software, VPN clients, music players, photo editors, PC optimizers, or online games.
But unbeknownst to the targets, the hackers hid malware inside the apps. Once the YouTube creators received and installed the demo app, the installer would drop malware on their devices, malware which would extract login credentials and authentication cookies from their browsers and send the stolen data to a remote server.
The hackers would then use the authentication cookies to access a YouTuber’s account —bypassing the need to enter a two-factor authentication (2FA) token— and move to change passwords and the account’s recovery email and phone numbers.
With the victims locked out of their accounts, the hackers would typically sell the hijacked YouTube channel on underground marketplaces for stolen identities.
Hacked accounts sold on Trade Groups even to this day
But independently from Google TAG, this reporter has also followed these attacks since November 2019, and after a flood of complaints on Google’s support forum [1, 2, 3, 4, 5] suggested that the incident described in the tweet was not an isolated case.
At the time, we tracked the stolen account of MarcoStyle, a US-based gamer, to a Russian website named Trade Groups.
Founded in 2013, the website claims to operate an Amazon-like market where users can register and then sell any of their social media accounts.
But despite the attempt of building a legitimate facade, things were not as they appeared. Besides MarcoStyle’s stolen account, the Trade Groups website also hosted several users who were selling hundreds of accounts on a daily basis, a clear sign that they were not the legitimate owners of those profiles.
Trade-Groups-website
IMAGE: CATALIN CIMPANU
Since November 2019, this reporter has randomly contacted users that had their social media profiles, and especially YouTube and Instagram accounts listed on the site.
In phone and email interviews with more than 20 victims, we heard the exact same scenario described in Google’s report today.
For example, MarcoStyle said he was approached with an offer to test and review a new game optimization tool called Orio.
Youtube-Orio
IMAGE: CATALIN CIMPANU
“As soon as I installed it, I knew something was wrong,” MarcoStyle said in an interview via Discord in November 2019. “I knew I had 2FA turned on, but still lost access to the account.”
“The person who emailed me never replied, then a few days later someone told me the account was for sale online,” he added.
Tianfu-results
IMAGE: CATALIN CIMPANU
In December 2019, a Romanian fashion vlogger who we’ll reference only by her initials F.A. went through something similar. She was approached and asked to install an app to connect to an ad agency’s backend in preparation for a future collaboration.
Instead, she had her YouTube, Facebook, and Instagram accounts taken from her. F.A. never regained control over her YouTube account, which had amassed roughly 1k followers by that point. Soon after, she dropped her attempts at forging a career as a vlogger, unwilling to start from scratch with a new account.
We also spoke with L.L., a Polish gamer who managed to build a channel of more than 12k followers. We found him via a non-Gmail email address that was still present in his YouTube account’s About section that the hackers forgot to remove.
In an email, L.L said he lost control over his account after he received an email from someone posing as a representative for a gaming company.
Days later, his account was on Trade Groups, for sale for only 25,000 rubles (~$350).
The most recent YouTube creator we spoke to was a Russian gamer named San4esGG, which also lost his account as part of this campaign. At the end of August, he still hadn’t been able to recover their account despite filing a request with Google.
san4
IMAGE: CATALIN CIMPANU
Most accounts were returned to their original owners
Throughout the past two years, this reporter also attempted to track how these accounts were misused.
Some accounts were permanently rebranded and had new owners, but most of the accounts listed on Trade Groups usually found their way back into their original owner’s hands, with some faster than others.
However, it appeared that buyers typically knew what they were getting when buying accounts via Trade Groups —namely, hacked accounts that were bound to be returned to their old owners within days or weeks.
Using YouTube’s mobile notification system, we put some of the hacked accounts under surveillance. Quite a few of the accounts we followed were used to host short live streams that peddled cryptocurrency scams —similarly to what Google also found in its own investigation.
“The channel name, profile picture and content were all replaced with cryptocurrency branding to impersonate large tech or cryptocurrency exchange firms. The attacker live-streamed videos promising cryptocurrency giveaways in exchange for an initial contribution,” said Ashley Shen, a member of Google TAG.
Scams this reporter has tracked throughout 2020 involved schemes where the accounts were rebranded with the identities of Bill Gales, Elon Musk, or Linus Torvalds, all of which promoted some sort of cryptocurrency Ponzi scheme.
bill-gates-hijack-1
IMAGE: CATALIN CIMPANU
Google: More than 4,000 YouTube creator accounts were hijacked
Today, Google said that it identified more than 15,000 email accounts used by this group to reach out and communicate with victims and 1,011 websites that hosted malware-infected apps.
Google unmasks two-year-old phishing & malware campaign targeting YouTube users More than 4,000 YouTube accounts hijacked in two-year-old phishing campaign.
Youtube creators were tricked with offers for business collaborations.
Hijacked accounts were sold on underground marketplaces for prices ranging from $20 to $10,000.
Almost two years after a wave of complaints flooded Google’s support forums about YouTube accounts getting hijacked even if users had two-factor authentication enabled, Google’s security team has finally tracked down the root cause of these attacks.
In a report published today, the Google Threat Analysis Group (TAG) attributed these incidents to “a group of hackers recruited in a Russian-speaking forum.”
TAG said the hackers operated by reaching out to victims via email with various types of business opportunities.
YouTubers were typically lured with potential sponsorship deals. Victims were asked to install and test various applications and then publish a review.
Apps typically used in these schemes involved antivirus software, VPN clients, music players, photo editors, PC optimizers, or online games.
But unbeknownst to the targets, the hackers hid malware inside the apps. Once the YouTube creators received and installed the demo app, the installer would drop malware on their devices, malware which would extract login credentials and authentication cookies from their browsers and send the stolen data to a remote server.
The hackers would then use the authentication cookies to access a YouTuber’s account —bypassing the need to enter a two-factor authentication (2FA) token— and move to change passwords and the account’s recovery email and phone numbers.
With the victims locked out of their accounts, the hackers would typically sell the hijacked YouTube channel on underground marketplaces for stolen identities.
Hacked accounts sold on Trade Groups even to this day
But independently from Google TAG, this reporter has also followed these attacks since November 2019, and after a flood of complaints on Google’s support forum [1, 2, 3, 4, 5] suggested that the incident described in the tweet was not an isolated case.
At the time, we tracked the stolen account of MarcoStyle, a US-based gamer, to a Russian website named Trade Groups.
Founded in 2013, the website claims to operate an Amazon-like market where users can register and then sell any of their social media accounts.
But despite the attempt of building a legitimate facade, things were not as they appeared. Besides MarcoStyle’s stolen account, the Trade Groups website also hosted several users who were selling hundreds of accounts on a daily basis, a clear sign that they were not the legitimate owners of those profiles.
Trade-Groups-website
IMAGE: CATALIN CIMPANU
Since November 2019, this reporter has randomly contacted users that had their social media profiles, and especially YouTube and Instagram accounts listed on the site.
In phone and email interviews with more than 20 victims, we heard the exact same scenario described in Google’s report today.
For example, MarcoStyle said he was approached with an offer to test and review a new game optimization tool called Orio.
Youtube-Orio
IMAGE: CATALIN CIMPANU
“As soon as I installed it, I knew something was wrong,” MarcoStyle said in an interview via Discord in November 2019. “I knew I had 2FA turned on, but still lost access to the account.”
“The person who emailed me never replied, then a few days later someone told me the account was for sale online,” he added.
Tianfu-results
IMAGE: CATALIN CIMPANU
In December 2019, a Romanian fashion vlogger who we’ll reference only by her initials F.A. went through something similar. She was approached and asked to install an app to connect to an ad agency’s backend in preparation for a future collaboration.
Instead, she had her YouTube, Facebook, and Instagram accounts taken from her. F.A. never regained control over her YouTube account, which had amassed roughly 1k followers by that point. Soon after, she dropped her attempts at forging a career as a vlogger, unwilling to start from scratch with a new account.
We also spoke with L.L., a Polish gamer who managed to build a channel of more than 12k followers. We found him via a non-Gmail email address that was still present in his YouTube account’s About section that the hackers forgot to remove.
In an email, L.L said he lost control over his account after he received an email from someone posing as a representative for a gaming company.
Days later, his account was on Trade Groups, for sale for only 25,000 rubles (~$350).
The most recent YouTube creator we spoke to was a Russian gamer named San4esGG, which also lost his account as part of this campaign. At the end of August, he still hadn’t been able to recover their account despite filing a request with Google.
san4
IMAGE: CATALIN CIMPANU
Most accounts were returned to their original owners
Throughout the past two years, this reporter also attempted to track how these accounts were misused.
Some accounts were permanently rebranded and had new owners, but most of the accounts listed on Trade Groups usually found their way back into their original owner’s hands, with some faster than others.
However, it appeared that buyers typically knew what they were getting when buying accounts via Trade Groups —namely, hacked accounts that were bound to be returned to their old owners within days or weeks.
Using YouTube’s mobile notification system, we put some of the hacked accounts under surveillance. Quite a few of the accounts we followed were used to host short live streams that peddled cryptocurrency scams —similarly to what Google also found in its own investigation.
“The channel name, profile picture and content were all replaced with cryptocurrency branding to impersonate large tech or cryptocurrency exchange firms. The attacker live-streamed videos promising cryptocurrency giveaways in exchange for an initial contribution,” said Ashley Shen, a member of Google TAG.
Scams this reporter has tracked throughout 2020 involved schemes where the accounts were rebranded with the identities of Bill Gales, Elon Musk, or Linus Torvalds, all of which promoted some sort of cryptocurrency Ponzi scheme.
bill-gates-hijack-1
IMAGE: CATALIN CIMPANU
Google: More than 4,000 YouTube creator accounts were hijacked
Today, Google said that it identified more than 15,000 email accounts used by this group to reach out and communicate with victims and 1,011 websites that hosted malware-infected apps.