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Fake Cryptocurrencies Giveaways On Twitter Are Conducted By 15,000 Bots

A survey released yesterday, August 6th, uncovered the notorious phenomenon of Twitter accounts which promote fake cryptocurrencies giveaways, disclosing a network of about 15,000 scam bots, reported the CoinTelegraph.

The Twitter bots analyze, which still cheat unknowing users, originates from computer security firm Duo Security.

The project entailed 88 million Twitter accounts, which were discovered and ranked using a software program designed by engineers based on machine learning.

With only the last 200 tweets from every account, this software has uncovered a network of 15,000 bots that promote fake contests by impersonating a few of the most well-known characters in the crypto-verse.

“Users tend to trust a tweet even based on how often it has been tweeted or appreciated. Anyone who manages this particular botnet knows this, and has designed it to take advantage of this trend,” states Duo Security data scientist Olabode Anise in the news release that comes with the research.

A network of 15,000 bots are offering fake cryptocurrencies giveaways on Twitter

A number of industry figures who have been embodied by bots have renamed themselves on Twitter to indicate that they are not offering cryptocurrencies or crypto tokens, including Ethereum (ETH) co-founder Vitalik Buterin, who is now known as Vitalik Non-giver of Ether on Twitter.

“It’s important to analyze an account almost holistically, even looking at the metadata of the content,” added Olabode Anise.

“For example, these accounts usually tweet in short bursts, so the average time between tweets is very low. Documentation of these patterns of behavior can also be used to identify other malicious botnets,” the security expert continued.

Anise and the associate Jordan Wright will showcase their achievements at the Black Hat USA 2018 IT security briefing in Las Vegas on Wednesday, August 8th.

In reply to the research, Twitter said it knew about the issues and that ‘spam’ accounts would be less than 5% of all current accounts on the social network. The company also indicated that, in most instances, the false cryptocurrencies giveaways are concealed by default.

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Crypto News

YouTube And Google LLC Mentioned In The Documentation Of A Lawsuit Against BitConnect

According to some court documents filed on July 3rd, YouTube has been added as a defendant in a class action lawsuit against BitConnect. The lawsuit was initially filed on January 24th by six individuals represented by the Silver Miller law firm. The applicants claim that the cryptocurrency investment platform BitConnect issued crypto tokens which were unregistered securities, and obtained additional funds through a wide range of Ponzi Schemes.

The plaintiffs stated that their personal losses amounted to a total of $771,000.

According to Cointelegraph, BitConnect and its affiliated parties published a series of promotional videos on YouTube, which were deemed inappropriate as the material allegedly attracted potential investors to a fraudulent investment scheme. YouTube is said to have failed to declassify and demonetize published videos, exposing “countless” YouTube users to harmful videos and illegally promoting investment.

YouTube and Google LLC involved in a class action lawsuit against BitConnect

BitConnect’s top ten YouTube affiliates posted more than 70,000 hours of raw content, generating about 58 billion hits. The document says that the number of views from several of the affiliate promoters’ videos far exceeded the threshold numbers for the “enhanced” eligibility standards.

In particular, some users reported fraudulent BitConnect activity to YouTube, posting videos with titles such as “How the BitConnect scam works in great detail,” “Craig Grant explains the BitConnect scam” and others.

This case is not about YouTube being the speaker or editor of your website’s content. Instead, the liability is based on YouTube’s inability to act after learning from content published directly on YouTube from the easily foreseeable damage posed by its advertising partners. As the old saying goes, “Sometimes when you sleep with dogs, you get fleas.”

David Silver, Silver Miller law firm, for Cointelegraph

The plaintiffs claim that if YouTube had done a proper search of their databases, it would have removed the harmful videos from BitConnect. Instead, YouTube allegedly accepted an increasing number of videos related to BitConnect, resulting in numerous victims.

The document also refers to Google LLC, which changed its financial products policy to prohibit all ads related to cryptocurrency and associated content due to potential harm to users of Google-owned platforms, including YouTube.

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