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Users Are Being Fooled Into Clicking Malicious Links By Falsely Verified Facebook Pages

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Facebook verified accounts that have been compromised are now acting as Meta, buying advertisements on the site, and reportedly tricking people into clicking dubious download links.

Recently, a few trusted Facebook pages were breached, and it was discovered that the compromised accounts were spreading suspected malware through platform-approved and bought adverts. The accounts, though, ought to be simple to identify because they sometimes impersonated Facebook.

Some of the advertisements were initially seen by social media expert Matt Navarra, who then shared them on Twitter.

“@Meta, how did this ad get approved? He tweeted an image of a phony Meta ad with the words, “Verified account imitating Meta misleading consumers into installing dubious software.

It wasn’t a singular incident; a second verified Facebook account was also compromised and is now misrepresenting as “Google AI” and directing Facebook users to bogus links for Bard, Google’s AI chatbot.

Before the account name was changed on April 29, that account belonged to Indian singer and actress Miss Pooja, according to TechCrunch.

The report said that the account had more than 7 million followers and had been active for at least ten years.

‘Meta Ads’ and ‘Meta Ads Manager’ are only a few of the official-sounding websites that have been hijacked.

Tens of thousands of followers received suspicious links from such accounts.

According to a Meta spokesman, they devote a lot of effort to identifying and stopping frauds and hackers.

Scammers are always attempting to circumvent our security measures, despite the fact that many of the enhancements we’ve made are difficult to detect since they prevent consumers from experiencing problems in the first place, the representative was quoted as saying.

The public’s interest in ChatGPT is being exploited by malware developers last week, who are utilizing this curiosity to persuade users to download malicious software and browser extensions.

The business related this situation to bitcoin frauds since both strategies prey on people’s curiosity and trust to get private data.

It discovered around ten malware families using technologies like ChatGPT and others to hijack accounts online.

In its security report, Meta stated: “Over the past few months, we’ve looked into and taken action against malware strains preying on people’s interest in OpenAI’s ChatGPT to trick them into installing malware pretending to provide AI functionality.”

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