Fake Account Creation Bots – Part 3: 8 Ways to Identify Fake Bot Accounts | F5 Labs

2024 Cybersecurity Predictions


In Part One of this series, we introduced fake account creation bots and why people create fake accounts, and in Part Two we covered why automation is used to create fake accounts and how fake accounts negatively impact businesses. In this article, we are going to focus on how to identify fake bot accounts. We do not go into how to identify all kinds of fake accounts but focus specifically on the identification of fake accounts created and controlled by bots. These are fake accounts being made at scale and hence leave behind trails that make them easier to identify than a single fake account manually created by an individual.

How to Identify Fake Bot Accounts

There are different kinds of fake accounts created by threat actors with different levels of sophistication. As a result, there isn’t one way to identify fake accounts and this article does not attempt to be a comprehensive guide on fake account identification. We however will give some insights into some common methods that can be used to identify fake accounts. It is important to note that these approaches may not be able to identify the most sophisticated fake accounts from advanced actors.

Username Pattern Commonalities

Fake accounts are typically created in an automated fashion and in large numbers which creates some patterns in the account names that allow them to be identified and linked together. The kinds of patterns in the fake account names depend on the level of sophistication of the attacker. Below are five different methods used by attackers to create fake accounts. Understanding these approaches will help you know how to identify these fake accounts.

Numbered Accounts

User accounts that have the same root username and domain name, but the usernames are numbered, and incremented. For example, “fakeaccount1@gmail,com”, “fakeaccount2@gmail.com”, …, “fakeaccount18765@gmail.com”. This is the simplest form of fake account names, used by the least sophisticated attackers. This approach has several shortcomings including the fact that it is easy to identify these accounts as potential fake accounts, as well as the fact that once you identify one of the fake accounts you can easily identify and delete all associated accounts. As a result, more sophisticated attackers will use more complex approaches.

Random Username Generation

Another common approach used by attackers, slightly more sophisticated than the first, is to randomly generate alphanumeric usernames that are not meaningful to humans. This is done using a simple randomizer with a fixed or variable text length. Less sophisticated actors tend to have fixed length usernames while more sophisticated actors can also randomize the length of the usernames. Examples of this sort of account creation include addresses such as “PWBNhe7Ywu@qq.com”, ”xYrjgJgWL2@qq.com”, “4BC3idTCCc@qq.com” with a fixed length randomization, and “4BRh8aEHN8@qq.com”,”vGccVigQpHr9ZKc@qq.com”, “FGyCqdmpLJtJWC64JQZv@qq.com” with a variable length randomization.

These kinds of usernames are hard to identify at scale as you cannot easily use regular expressions to identify them, especially if they use a common domain name making this approach superior to the simple numbered accounts mentioned above. The chances of these accounts already existing in email and other systems that attackers are targeting is also low, with little risk of collisions for these usernames. The accounts do, however, look suspicious to visual inspection, which is one of the shortcomings of this approach.

Use of the Same Format

A more sophisticated approach is to use a standard username format. This is not simply having the same base username an incrementing a number, as in the first approach described above. This approach will also change the root while maintaining the same format.

For example, an attacker might select a format of “firstname.lastname.2digityear@domain” and generate addresses such as “john.doe.89@yahoo.com”, “peter.sullivan76@gmail.com”, or “mary.childs03@gmail.com”

Or the attacker might select a format of “initial+lastname+4digitDOB@domain” and generate accounts like “jdoe1986@yahoo.com”, “psullivan1976@gmail.com”, or “mchilds2003@gmail.com”

To generate these accounts, attackers will typically acquire lists of PII or spilled credentials, or simply scrape social media for names and dates of birth and create the seed list used to generate and create these email addresses. Attackers can also use dictionaries of names or words in combination with randomly generated dates of birth (DOBs) to generate similar kinds of accounts. This provides randomness in the account names which makes them harder to spot and makes it difficult, even if a subset of the accounts are identified, for security teams to find the rest of the accounts. Trying to delete all accounts with the same format, e.g. in the examples 1 and 2 above, will result in an unacceptable amount of false positives as many real users tend to follow the same username patterns.

Username Fuzzing

This is another common approach used by sophisticated attackers to create large numbers of fake accounts. This approach is based on the difference between how email providers and the other companies where fake accounts are being created interpret special characters in email addresses. Specifically, most email systems like Gmail do not actually consider periods in an email address as being part of the email address, while most other systems in the world do. This leads to a case where a single Gmail account can be used to create hundreds and potentially thousands of fake accounts.

As an example, the Gmail address: “johndoesoap@gmail.com” can be used to create the following fake accounts on almost any system:

Fake accounts: “johndoesoap@gmail.com”, “john.doesoap@gmail.com”, “johndoe.soap@gmail.com”, “john.doe,soap@gmail.com”, “j.ohndoesoap@gmail.com”, “jo.hndoesoap@gmail.com”, “joh.ndoesoap@gmail.com”, “john.doesoap@gmail.com”, “johnd.oesoap@gmail.com”, “j.o.h.n.d.o.e.s.o.a.p@gmail.com” etc.

While there are a large number of valid combinations, all verification and notification emails for all these fake accounts will all be sent to the same Gmail email address “johndoesoap@gmail.com”. This reduces the difficulty attackers would face in trying to create thousands of Gmail accounts and circumvent the controls that Google has in place to prevent this. They can simply create a single account manually which is easy to do, then use automation to fuzz that one email address and create potentially thousands of fake accounts on other platforms.

It is important to note that periods are not the only special characters that can be used to achieve username fuzzing. “+” among other characters can also be used instead of, or in combination with periods to achieve the same result.

Stolen Email Addresses

A more sophisticated approach used by attackers may be to use real compromised user email addresses to create fake accounts. Email addresses of real users with good email domains are hacked through phishing, malware, credential stuffing and brute force attacks. These accounts are then taken over and passwords changed to lock out the original owners. Emails can then be used for nefarious purposes including fake account creation. These accounts are much harder to identify and cannot be tied together from username pattern analysis. These accounts also tend to have a wide range of email domains which also adds to the difficulty of identification. This approach is more expensive as the compromised email addresses must be purchased for a price or costs incurred to take over and compromise them.

Some attackers will use a combination of the approaches above to have a wide range of different username formats which makes it much harder to identify all the accounts associated with the fake account bot.

Account Creation Timing

Many fake accounts are created by unsophisticated actors who will attempt to create a large number of accounts on a system in a very short period of time, typically hundreds of accounts per minute. This traffic is very easy to spot as even large websites do not have this number of new accounts being created every minute. Spikes in new account creation should therefore be looked at with suspicion unless tied to some marketing push or promotion for users to create new accounts. Below is an example of a spike in new account creation activity being done by a fake account creation bot.



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In Part One of this series, we introduced fake account creation bots and why people create fake accounts, and in Part Two we covered why automation is used to create fake accounts and how fake accounts negatively impact businesses. In this article, we are going to focus on how to identify fake bot accounts. We…

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