I've noticed on some scam forums and subreddits I frequent that scammers have been using target site's own support searches to redirect users to scam phone numbers.
On both Ticketmaster and Facebook, and many other sites, when you perform a search on their support site it spits back your query in big letters at the top of the page. If you craft the correct search and then buy Google Ads pretending to be Ticketmaster, then you can redirect users to your call center and scam them. And because they link for your ad actually links to Ticketmaster the ad passes validation and appears to be a legit link in the eyes of Google.
I've been seeing similar scams via PayPal. The scammers apparently add the target email address as a forwarding address on a hacked or created-for-purpose email account. And that bouncer email address is signed up for PayPal. So the scam email is actually from PayPal, bounced through some other inbox. The To name and address is of the bouncer email address PayPal sent it to.
One version involves sending money to someone with the PayPal account (so the target might think it was sent from their own account) with a "note" to the transaction recipient, which the target sees, which says PayPal has detected unusual activity and please call this phone number to request a refund.
Another involves a "Your ITEM NAME order is on its way" email where the item being ordered is called something like, "Some Company, Inc: Don't recognize the seller? Call us at SOME PHONE NUMBER".
A third is like the second, except it's a "You paid CURRENCY to SELLER" email. This one has the PayPal user's name at the top, so not as convincing perhaps.
lifeisstillgood · 4h ago
So, I craft a search where the search query is “call 1 800 scam”, then I buy a google ad with key word of “ticketmaster help”, the ad links to real ticketmaster with my query, and google shows that ad to someone having trouble and hey presto they call my scam line at 4 quid a minute from their mobile?
Yuck all round. I mean ticketmaster is just a sin eater for greedy popstars but yuck ..
jancsika · 3h ago
> Yuck all round.
Yes, but also it's an impressive digital Jedi mind trick on a website.
signs a question mark with hand
"This is the support number you're looking for."
And the victim is extra primed here because so many companies make it nearly impossible to talk to a human. Yikes!
Almost seems like there's room here for a grey hat to come in and use this trick to do a good faith job trying to help the customer through their problem. Then tell them at the end that a recent anti-trust suit requires them to tell the customer about alternate independent venues in their area where they can support live music.
amelius · 19m ago
On top of that, you receive private information about people from Google, because if someone calls your number, then you know that they were on ticketmaster. Replace ticketmaster by e.g. a swingers club, and now Google's ad businessmodel is
in real trouble because it leaks sensitive information.
fckgw · 2h ago
Exactly. And when you try and help these people and explain that you didn't actually call Ticketmaster support they will tell you that they found the phone number on the official Ticketmaster website and Google said it was a verified link.
But why does google allow unverified owners of a domain to buy ads for it? Surely only ticketmaster or agencies approved by ticket master should be allowed to do this?
progbits · 2h ago
Because most of the ads are created by external ad agencies, and the people involved are not competent enough to do any verification.
Source: I've also thought this was ridiculous and asked someone working on the adsense team. Apparently tried enforcing some domain verification mechanism in an experiment, but most companies and agencies struggled to get the verification done and of course the $ metrics on this launch dropped, causing execs to force them to stop.
simonw · 9m ago
Maybe a partial solution here would be to offer some kind of "domain locking" option?
Allow sites that are heavy targets of this kind of scam - like ticketmaster - to add a "AdSense: locked" line to their robots.txt (or similar) - if that line is present then advertisers have to go through an additional domain verification step in order to place an ad.
charlieyu1 · 53m ago
There was a time when you search for WhatsApp in Google the first sponsored result is a scam site
fckgw · 39m ago
If you search for "HP Support" or "Dell Phone Number" you will get a scam site 50% of the time now.
fckgw · 2h ago
Not necessarily, if you have an affiliate program or something like that you could buy ads for, say, eBay using your affiliate link in the hopes of you generating more profit than the ads cost.
pnw · 9m ago
FWIW I sent this to a friend on the dev team at Ticketmaster and they escalated it.
redeux · 2h ago
I found and removed one of these from my company's forums. When I Googled the number I could see it was on a ton of other support forums.
levocardia · 3h ago
Wow. Programmatic SEO and its consequences. Genius...
miki123211 · 2h ago
This actually makes sense to me; if you're an artist selling tickets on Ticketmaster, it's in everybody's interests to let you show ads for those tickets to your fans.
If only the Ticketmaster team could show ads on that domain, all these ads would have to go through their marketing team (and use ticketmaster's budget, with all the accounting and invoicing this requires), which would massively slow things down.
Instead, it seems that Google has some kind of protection where ads mentioning Ticketmaster must link to their official domain, to prevent things like this from happening. The scammers just found a way for that domain to display arbitrary text.
RGamma · 4h ago
How desperate one has to be...
OkGoDoIt · 3h ago
Have you tried getting ticketing support from Ticketmaster? Even a sketchy phone number is better than no option at all…
RGamma · 1h ago
I don't mean reaching for support. I mean setting up a scam like this. It seems so bottom of the barrel scummy, creative too, but mostly scummy.
Imagine you have the creativity and criminal energy to conceptualize and operate something like this (and the rat tail of justice evasion, laundering money, etc). It seems so much easier to make money in the honest economy.
Unless of course you're operating for a rogue state...
advael · 1h ago
You've got a shocking amount of faith in the honest economy for this moment in time
SoftTalker · 5h ago
Among the common vulnerabilities listed:
> Outdated Wordpress plugins and CMS systems
No surprise, having worked in edu the following scenario was very common:
1) Researcher gets a grant for a project
2) Grad student sets up a Drupal site for the project
3) Things are maintained and updated for a couple of years
4) Grant runs out, project wraps up, student graduates, everyone forgets about the server which sits unattended and unmaintained.
Still happens, but most universites have really clamped down on the ability to just stand up a web server on the network. Many are requiring everything to be on a centrally managed enterprise CMS which is a PITA but that's the fallout for too much sloppy administration.
semi-extrinsic · 4h ago
At my old university ~15 years ago, all IPs of all computers were public IPV4 addresses. Any computer plugged in to any ethernet port on campus was given such a "quasi-static" IP address. All normal ports were open - ssh, http(s), you name it. It was the OG zero trust architecture.
foobarian · 3h ago
Ah the good old days of putting my head down at my desk lulled into a nap by the once-a-second sounds of ssh login attempt logs being written to the spinning rust drive...
yjftsjthsd-h · 4h ago
> At my old university ~15 years ago, all IPs of all computers were public IPV4 addresses. Any computer plugged in to any ethernet port on campus was given such a "quasi-static" IP address.
Well that's fine; my school did the same thing and other than feeling wasteful there was no-
> All normal ports were open - ssh, http(s), you name it. It was the OG zero trust architecture.
Oh. Yeah, open ports by default is... and interesting life choice.
morkalork · 1h ago
When you're living in the residences and there's a DC++ server running, it's pretty sweet. Ours had a whole 1.5TB of stuff on it!
DaSHacka · 1h ago
My university does the same, except they understand the concept of "firewalls"
fecal_henge · 4h ago
This just got cancelled at my institution. I could have retained it if I argued strongly enough.
guappa · 2h ago
How am I going to work from home if my computer at university is not recheable?
kevin_thibedeau · 3h ago
The low friction solution is to serve public_html from a home dir and direct users to generate static sites.
notyourwork · 4h ago
Yep, I remember having ssh access to production servers from a non-work machine at a well known university.
We could also get external ips and connectivity without much supervision. Core security needs to be prioritized to avoid this from happening.
leftcenterright · 5h ago
> Norton, Kaspersky, Zscaler, F-secure, NordVPN, Virustotal, Palo Alto: all of them marked these links as safe.
This is sad to see, these tools are forced down so many companies in name of "compliance" while totally not worth the maintenance and cost overhead. Apparently they haven't got any better in the last decade.
markbeare · 2h ago
I work for a cybersecurity company, and I think that the method they used to check these links with the mentioned security companies was not a reflection of how they detect. I'm sure that many of these companies do not have these domains in their DBs of bad sites but if you were to run these products and then visit the site then heuristic detection would have likely flagged the sites.
Muromec · 4h ago
Well, that's exactly the difference between complience and security
charcircuit · 5h ago
I'm curious if the link inside the pdf would have been detected.
vin10 · 4h ago
It is the same for nested links as well. They mostly have a chain of links, each one taking you to a new one with hop count ranging anywhere from 5 up to 10 or more.
gitroom · 5h ago
damn, i remember seeing old servers just getting dusty and full of holes after the student left. kinda crazy how much messy stuff is hiding in corners like that lol
3abiton · 4h ago
>
I have been advised not to disclose specific vulnerabilities since the parties involved are not most friendly and transparent in handling security reports. While most of these got reported and some even got fixed, I can only disclose high-level details of the compromise path. Some just ghosted me after conveniently fixing the flaws, and one even gave me a phone call, which was somewhat scary and perhaps not worth the adrenaline.
What an unprofessional sysadmin move, borderline infuriating.
mhuffman · 2h ago
I am surprised no one mentioned using LLMs to spell and grammar check their emails and vibe-code bank landing-pages to continue a more polished version of scamming elderly people out of their life savings.
curiousgal · 48m ago
The misspellings/shitty grammar are on purpose.
mhuffman · 21m ago
I have heard that theory from some cybersecurity experts online but have never seen it substantiated in any way (by interviewing some scammers, for example) and frankly don't believe it.
The misspellings and grammatical errors (used to?) continue on the fake sites that are created to steal credentials, and the excuses for most of the reasoning regarding emails do not hold there.
could someone with legal/data-privacy expertise comment if this would be something they have to disclose under data breach disclosure laws?
Technically it might not be a "data leak", but it very well could result in one if arbitrary content (including js?) can be uploaded to these webpages?
DyslexicAtheist · 4h ago
they've been contacted through the "proper channels" over 18 months ago by several (more than 1) security researchers.
After some people started publicly naming and shaming on LinkedIn and tagging ENISA, the issue got some exposure, but still was not fixed. It only made it more evident that several people independently reported these issues, and they became aware of peers stumbling over the issue. Still nothing happened.
ENISA is supposed to act as a CNA and expects to be notified of data breaches from EU based orgs for PSIRT / CSIRT as part of the Cybersec Resiliance Act and other laws.
Would I trust that vulnerability data that gets reported as a CVE, or a breach notification is safe with ENSIA ?
... feck no!
Would I trust that documents that europa.eu hosts on its infra are authentic? (such as security-compliance documents telling orgs how to properly implement security, but literally any public communication under one of the domains)
... hecking heck no!
... At this stage I think everyone else except ENISA has control over their infrastructure.
Alex-Programs · 4h ago
Is it just me or is cybersecurity... Calming down? I feel like a few years ago there was constant news of ransomware, intrusions, vulnerabilities, etc, but more recently the defensive side seems to have the upper hand.
candiddevmike · 1h ago
You only hear about the offensive side winning when the company can't prevent it from leaking. Rest assured, the only thing "calming down" in cybersecurity is the nihilism that nothing involving a human will ever be secure.
chelmzy · 3h ago
Not particularly. The only thing I have noticed in the past decade is the decline of the "American Hacker". Most groups are foreign but will partner with younger Americans for social engineering (ex. Scattered Spider). You just don't have people like Albert Gonzalez/Stephen Watt in America now. However, I suspect that many American hackers have shifted to targeting overseas countries that are not friendly with the US.
alcover · 2h ago
> You just don't have people like Albert Gonzalez/Stephen Watt in America now
I don't know what the state of big corps netsec is today but these guys had it somewhat easy. They got initial access through weak wifi then pivoted with SQL injects and such.
yapyap · 54m ago
Honestly you are always (half) a step behind and that’s for the worst cyber criminals cause the state sponsored ones are multiple steps ahead.
It’s very interesting to look at from the outside, thanks for sharing.
superkuh · 5h ago
These days most "cyber" crimes are commited by corporations against their customers/users (just like most theft is wage theft). These small fish/phish putting sites on exploited servers are a drop in the bucket. It is sad when some university resource gets shut down because they didn't mantain it after the grad student that set it up graduates though. We really need to teach the people that set up these things to use .html pages instead of dynamic languages and databases.
neffy · 4h ago
Sure. Corporations commit ransomware attacks all the time.
On both Ticketmaster and Facebook, and many other sites, when you perform a search on their support site it spits back your query in big letters at the top of the page. If you craft the correct search and then buy Google Ads pretending to be Ticketmaster, then you can redirect users to your call center and scam them. And because they link for your ad actually links to Ticketmaster the ad passes validation and appears to be a legit link in the eyes of Google.
Example of a crafted search term: https://help.ticketmaster.com/hc/en-us/search?utf8=%E2%9C%93...
One version involves sending money to someone with the PayPal account (so the target might think it was sent from their own account) with a "note" to the transaction recipient, which the target sees, which says PayPal has detected unusual activity and please call this phone number to request a refund.
Another involves a "Your ITEM NAME order is on its way" email where the item being ordered is called something like, "Some Company, Inc: Don't recognize the seller? Call us at SOME PHONE NUMBER".
A third is like the second, except it's a "You paid CURRENCY to SELLER" email. This one has the PayPal user's name at the top, so not as convincing perhaps.
Yuck all round. I mean ticketmaster is just a sin eater for greedy popstars but yuck ..
Yes, but also it's an impressive digital Jedi mind trick on a website.
signs a question mark with hand
"This is the support number you're looking for."
And the victim is extra primed here because so many companies make it nearly impossible to talk to a human. Yikes!
Almost seems like there's room here for a grey hat to come in and use this trick to do a good faith job trying to help the customer through their problem. Then tell them at the end that a recent anti-trust suit requires them to tell the customer about alternate independent venues in their area where they can support live music.
Here's a real example from the same thing happening on FB (don't call that number) https://i.redd.it/w9htjqflgjle1.jpeg
Source: I've also thought this was ridiculous and asked someone working on the adsense team. Apparently tried enforcing some domain verification mechanism in an experiment, but most companies and agencies struggled to get the verification done and of course the $ metrics on this launch dropped, causing execs to force them to stop.
Allow sites that are heavy targets of this kind of scam - like ticketmaster - to add a "AdSense: locked" line to their robots.txt (or similar) - if that line is present then advertisers have to go through an additional domain verification step in order to place an ad.
If only the Ticketmaster team could show ads on that domain, all these ads would have to go through their marketing team (and use ticketmaster's budget, with all the accounting and invoicing this requires), which would massively slow things down.
Instead, it seems that Google has some kind of protection where ads mentioning Ticketmaster must link to their official domain, to prevent things like this from happening. The scammers just found a way for that domain to display arbitrary text.
Imagine you have the creativity and criminal energy to conceptualize and operate something like this (and the rat tail of justice evasion, laundering money, etc). It seems so much easier to make money in the honest economy.
Unless of course you're operating for a rogue state...
> Outdated Wordpress plugins and CMS systems
No surprise, having worked in edu the following scenario was very common:
1) Researcher gets a grant for a project
2) Grad student sets up a Drupal site for the project
3) Things are maintained and updated for a couple of years
4) Grant runs out, project wraps up, student graduates, everyone forgets about the server which sits unattended and unmaintained.
Still happens, but most universites have really clamped down on the ability to just stand up a web server on the network. Many are requiring everything to be on a centrally managed enterprise CMS which is a PITA but that's the fallout for too much sloppy administration.
Well that's fine; my school did the same thing and other than feeling wasteful there was no-
> All normal ports were open - ssh, http(s), you name it. It was the OG zero trust architecture.
Oh. Yeah, open ports by default is... and interesting life choice.
We could also get external ips and connectivity without much supervision. Core security needs to be prioritized to avoid this from happening.
This is sad to see, these tools are forced down so many companies in name of "compliance" while totally not worth the maintenance and cost overhead. Apparently they haven't got any better in the last decade.
I have been advised not to disclose specific vulnerabilities since the parties involved are not most friendly and transparent in handling security reports. While most of these got reported and some even got fixed, I can only disclose high-level details of the compromise path. Some just ghosted me after conveniently fixing the flaws, and one even gave me a phone call, which was somewhat scary and perhaps not worth the adrenaline.
What an unprofessional sysadmin move, borderline infuriating.
The misspellings and grammatical errors (used to?) continue on the fake sites that are created to steal credentials, and the excuses for most of the reasoning regarding emails do not hold there.
gta 5 site:europa.eu https://www.google.com/search?q=gta+5+site%3Aeuropa.eu&hl=en
Watch full site:europa.eu https://www.google.com/search?q=Watch+full+site%3Aeuropa.eu&...
So, fixed now?
Technically it might not be a "data leak", but it very well could result in one if arbitrary content (including js?) can be uploaded to these webpages?
After some people started publicly naming and shaming on LinkedIn and tagging ENISA, the issue got some exposure, but still was not fixed. It only made it more evident that several people independently reported these issues, and they became aware of peers stumbling over the issue. Still nothing happened.
ENISA is supposed to act as a CNA and expects to be notified of data breaches from EU based orgs for PSIRT / CSIRT as part of the Cybersec Resiliance Act and other laws.
Would I trust that vulnerability data that gets reported as a CVE, or a breach notification is safe with ENSIA ?
... feck no!
Would I trust that documents that europa.eu hosts on its infra are authentic? (such as security-compliance documents telling orgs how to properly implement security, but literally any public communication under one of the domains)
... hecking heck no!
... At this stage I think everyone else except ENISA has control over their infrastructure.
I don't know what the state of big corps netsec is today but these guys had it somewhat easy. They got initial access through weak wifi then pivoted with SQL injects and such.
It’s very interesting to look at from the outside, thanks for sharing.