The closest imitation of humans and their tasks are done currently is by a software application – Bots. They are mostly being used to give human-like experiences in customer services and other interactive vectors like – chatbots, shopbots, knowbots, spiders or crawlers, monitoring bots, etc. For this reason, tech experts call this ‘the age of bots’, the best example of this disruptive tech tool is ChatGPT, a chatbot. Businesses need to understand that this is the right time for them to invest in bot management solutions because these are times when bots are overpowering businesses
- Monitoring Bots: Monitors the uptime and system health of the websites
- Backlink Checker Bots: Checks the inbound URLs a website is getting so that marketers and SEO specialists can derive insights and optimize their site accordingly
- Social Network Bots: Bots that are run by social networking websites giving visibility to websites and driving engagements on their platforms
- Partner Bots: Useful to websites and carry out tasks, transactions and provide essential business services
- Aggregator/ Feed Fetcher Bots: Collate information from websites and keeps users or subscribers updated on news, events or blog posts
- Search Engine Crawler Bots: These bots or spiders crawl and index web pages to make them available on search engines
- Scraper Bots: These bots are programmed to steal content such as prices and product information so that they can undermine the pricing strategies of the target website
- Spam Bots: They primarily target community portals, blog comment sections and lead collection forms. They interfere with user conversations, troll users, and insert unwanted advertisements, links and banners
- Scalper Bots: These bots target ticketing websites to purchase hundreds of tickets as soon as bookings open and sell them to reseller websites at many times the original cost of the ticket
- Account Takeover – Account takeovers include credential stuffing, password spraying, and brute force attacks that are used to gain unauthorized access to a targeted account. Credential stuffing and password spraying are two popular techniques used today. Once hackers gain access to an account, they can begin additional stages of infection, data exfiltration or fraud.
- Scraping – Scraping is the process of extracting data or information from a website and publishing it elsewhere. Content price and inventory scraping is also used to gain a competitive advantage. These scrape bots crawl your web pages for specific information about your products. Typically, scrapers steal the entire content from websites or mobile applications and publish it to gain traffic.
- Inventory Exhaustion – Inventory exhaustion is when a bot is used to add hundreds of items to a cart and later, abandon them to prevent real shoppers from buying the products.
- Inventory Scalping – Hackers deploy retail bots to gain an advantage to buy goods and tickets during a flash sale, and then resell them later at a much higher price.
- Carding – Carders deploy bots on checkout pages to validate stolen-card details, and to crack gift cards.
- Skewed Analytics – Automated invalid traffic directed at your e-commerce portal can skews metrics and misleads decision-making when applied to advertisement budgets and other business decisions. Bots pollute metrics, disrupt funnel analysis, and inhibit KPI tracking.
- Application DoS – Application DoS attacks slow down e-commerce portals by exhausting web servers resources, 3rd party APIs, inventory databases and other critical resources to the point that they are unavailable for legitimate users.
- Ad Fraud – Bad bots are used to generate Invalid traffic designed to create false impressions and generate illegitimate clicks on websites and mobile apps.
- Account Creation – Bots are used to create fake accounts on a massive scale for content spamming, SEO and skewing analytics.
- E-Commerce – The e-commerce industry faces bot attacks that include account takeovers, scraping, inventory exhaustion, scalping, carding, skewed analytics, application DoS, Ad fraud, and account creation.
- Media – Digital publishers are vulnerable to automated attacks such as Ad fraud, scraping, skewed analytics, and form spam.
- Travel – The travel industries mainly deal with scraping attacks but can suffer from inventory exhaustion, carding and application DoS as well.
- Social Networks – Social platforms deal with automated bot attacks such as account takeovers, account creation, and application DoS.
- Ad Networks – Bots that create Sophisticated Invalid Traffic (SIVT) target ad networks for Ad fraud activity such as fraudulent clicks and impression performance.
- Financial Institutions – Banking, financial and insurance industries are all high-value targets for bots that leverage account takeovers, application DoS or content scraping.
- A high number of failed login attempts
- Increased chargebacks and transaction disputes
- Consecutive login attempts with different credentials from the same HTTP client
- Unusual request activity for selected application content and data
- Unexpected changes in website performance and metrics
- A sudden increase in the account creation rate
- Elevated traffic for certain limited-availability goods or services