BOTS NOW MAKE UP NEARLY HALF OF ALL INTERNET TRAFFIC GLOBALLY
Thales, the cybersecurity leader that protects critical
applications, APIs, and data, anywhere at scale, announced the release of the 2024 Imperva Bad Bot Report, a global
analysis of automated bot traffic across the internet. Nearly half (49.6%) of
all internet traffic came from bots in 2023—a 2% increase over the previous
year, and the highest level Imperva has reported since it began monitoring
automated traffic in 2013.
For the fifth
consecutive year, the proportion of web traffic associated with bad bots grew
to 32% in 2023, up from 30.2% in 2022, while traffic from human users decreased
to 50.4%. Automated traffic is costing organizations billions (USD) annually
due to attacks on websites, APIs, and applications.
“Bots are one of the most pervasive and growing
threats facing every industry,” says Nanhi
Singh, General Manager, Application Security at Imperva, a Thales company.
“From simple web scraping to malicious account takeover, spam, and denial of service,
bots negatively impact an organization’s bottom line by degrading online
services and requiring more investment in infrastructure and customer support.
Organizations must proactively address the threat of bad bots as attackers
sharpen their focus on API-related abuses that can lead to account compromise
or data exfiltration.”
Key trends identified in the 2024 Imperva Bad Bot
Report include:
· Global
average of bad bot traffic reached 32%: Ireland
(71%), Germany (67.5%), and Mexico (42.8%), saw the highest levels of bad bot
traffic in 2023. The US also saw a slightly higher ratio of bad bot traffic at
35.4% compared to 2022 (32.1%).
· Growing
use of generative AI connected to the rise in simple bots: Rapid
adoption of generative AI and large language models (LLMs) resulted in the
volume of simple bots increasing to 39.6% in 2023, up from 33.4% in 2022. The
technology uses web scraping bots and automated crawlers to feed training
models, while enabling nontechnical users to write automated scripts for their
own use.
· Account
takeover is a persistent business risk: Account
takeover (ATO) attacks increased 10% in 2023, compared to the same period in
the prior year. Notably, 44% of all ATO attacks targeted API endpoints,
compared to 35% in 2022. Of all login attempts across the internet, 11% were
associated with account takeover. The industries that saw the highest volume of
ATO attacks in 2023 were Financial Services (36.8%), Travel (11.5%), and
Business Services (8%).
· APIs
are a popular vector for attack: Automated
threats caused a significant 30% of API attacks in 2023. Among them, 17% were
bad bots exploiting business logic vulnerabilities—a flaw within the API’s
design and implementation that allows attackers to manipulate legitimate
functionality and gain access to sensitive data or user accounts.
Cybercriminals use automated bots to find and exploit APIs, which act as a
direct pathway to sensitive data, making them a prime target for business logic
abuse.
· Every
industry has a bot problem: For a second
consecutive year, Gaming (57.2%) saw the largest proportion of bad bot traffic.
Meanwhile, Retail (24.4%), Travel (20.7%), and Financial Services (15.7%)
experienced the highest volume of bot attacks. The proportion of advanced bad
bots, those that closely mimic human behavior and evade defenses, was highest
on Law & Government (75.8%), Entertainment (70.8%), and Financial Services
(67.1%) websites.
· Bad
bot traffic originating from residential ISPs grows to 25.8%: Early
bad bot evasion techniques relied on masquerading as a user agent (browser)
commonly used by legitimate human users. Bad bots masquerading as mobile user
agents accounted for 44.8% of all bad bot traffic in the past year, up from
28.1% just five years ago. Sophisticated actors combine mobile user agents with
the use of residential or mobile ISPs. Residential proxies allow bot operators
to evade detection by making it appear as if the origin of the traffic is a
legitimate, ISP-assigned residential IP address.
“Automated
bots will soon surpass the proportion of internet traffic coming from humans,
changing the way that organizations approach building and protecting their
websites and applications,” continued Singh. “As more AI-enabled tools are
introduced, bots will become omnipresent. Organizations must invest in bot
management and API security tools to manage the threat from malicious,
automated traffic.”
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