Thursday, May 15, 2025
HomeComputer SecurityHackers Abusing Legitimate Googlebot Services to Inject Cryptomining Malware

Hackers Abusing Legitimate Googlebot Services to Inject Cryptomining Malware

Published on

SIEM as a Service

Follow Us on Google News

Cybercriminals now abusing the legitimate Googlebot server using fake User-Agent from another Google service to deliver Crypto-currency malware to the target victims network.

Googlebot is providing legitimate traffic to the website which is to appear in Google search engine results.

Googlebot works by crawling the each and every updated link in your website to allow them into its search engine database and later make them available into users searching on Google’s search engine.

- Advertisement - Google News

So the user of Googlebot service urged to whitelist the IP address that is the relay in Googlebot server, in this case, the security mechanisms will be bypassed if there will be any malicious traffic coming from Googlebot service.

In this case, there are 2 possible ways to abuse the Googlebot service, one is too controlling the Googlebot server which is extremely difficult, another method could be possible by sending a fake User-Agent from another Google service.

A Method to Trick GoogleBot

Initially, Attackers abuse the Googlebot by using the simple trick to send malicious requests to the targeted victims.

This can be achieved by adding the malicious link within the website along with targeted victims address and the specific payload to drop into victims system.

<a href=”http://victim-address.com/exploit-payload”>malicious link<a>

Once the bot crawls this malicious page then it sends malicious GET request along with exploit-payload to the attacker’s target.

Researchers from F5 Networks said, we used two servers when testing this method—one for the attacker and another for the target. Using Google Search Console, we configured Googlebot to crawl through our attacker’s server where we added a web page that contained a link to the target server.
That link held a malicious payload. After some time sniffing traffic on the target server, we spotted the malicious request with our crafted malicious URL hitting the server. The origin of the request was none other than a legitimate Googlebot.

Based this analysis researchers confirmed that it was the real Googlebot delivering a crafted, malicious payload and it can be easily used by attackers to deliver malicious payloads in the very efficient way.

In this case, the attack could be limited since the attack will not get any response from the target and all the response send to the Googlebot, a real sender.

Attackers using the same method In August to send Apache Struts 2 remote code execution flaw with malicious Java payload is delivered via the URL that was delivered into the target by abusing Googlebot.

Related Read

DNS Hijacking Method Used by Powerful Malware to Hack Android, Desktop & iOS Devices

Balaji
Balaji
BALAJI is an Ex-Security Researcher (Threat Research Labs) at Comodo Cybersecurity. Editor-in-Chief & Co-Founder - Cyber Security News & GBHackers On Security.

Latest articles

Google Chrome Zero-Day Vulnerability (CVE-2025-4664) Actively Exploited in The Wild

Google has rolled out a fresh Stable Channel update for the Chrome browser across...

Threat Actors Leverage Weaponized HTML Files to Deliver Horabot Malware

A recent discovery by FortiGuard Labs has unveiled a cunning phishing campaign orchestrated by...

TA406 Hackers Target Government Entities to Steal Login Credentials

The North Korean state-sponsored threat actor TA406, also tracked as Opal Sleet and Konni,...

Google Threat Intelligence Releases Actionable Threat Hunting Technique for Malicious .desktop Files

Google Threat Intelligence has unveiled a series of sophisticated threat hunting techniques to detect...

Resilience at Scale

Why Application Security is Non-Negotiable

The resilience of your digital infrastructure directly impacts your ability to scale. And yet, application security remains a critical weak link for most organizations.

Application Security is no longer just a defensive play—it’s the cornerstone of cyber resilience and sustainable growth. In this webinar, Karthik Krishnamoorthy (CTO of Indusface) and Phani Deepak Akella (VP of Marketing – Indusface), will share how AI-powered application security can help organizations build resilience by

Discussion points


Protecting at internet scale using AI and behavioral-based DDoS & bot mitigation.
Autonomously discovering external assets and remediating vulnerabilities within 72 hours, enabling secure, confident scaling.
Ensuring 100% application availability through platforms architected for failure resilience.
Eliminating silos with real-time correlation between attack surface and active threats for rapid, accurate mitigation

More like this

Threat Actors Leverage Weaponized HTML Files to Deliver Horabot Malware

A recent discovery by FortiGuard Labs has unveiled a cunning phishing campaign orchestrated by...

Katz Stealer Malware Hits 78+ Chromium and Gecko-Based Browsers

Newly disclosed information-stealing malware dubbed Katz Stealer has emerged as a significant threat to...

Hackers Weaponize KeePass Password Manager to Spread Malware and Steal Passwords

Threat actors have successfully exploited the widely-used open-source password manager, KeePass, to spread malware...