Cybercriminals Exploit X’s Grok AI to Bypass Ad Protections and Spread Malware to Millions

Cybersecurity researchers have flagged a new technique that cybercriminals have adopted to bypass social media platform X’s malvertising protections and propagate malicious links using its artificial intelligence (AI) assistant Grok. The findings were highlighted by Nati Tal, head of Guardio Labs, in a series of posts on X. The technique has been codenamed Grokking. The approach is designed to

Cybersecurity researchers have flagged a new technique that cybercriminals have adopted to bypass social media platform X’s malvertising protections and propagate malicious links using its artificial intelligence (AI) assistant Grok.

The findings were highlighted by Nati Tal, head of Guardio Labs, in a series of posts on X. The technique has been codenamed Grokking.

The approach is designed to get around restrictions imposed by X in Promoted Ads that allow users to only include text, images, or videos, and subsequently amplify them to a broader audience, attracting hundreds of thousands of impressions through paid promotion.

To achieve this, malvertisers have been found to run video card-promoted posts with adult content as bait, with the spurious link hidden in the “From:” metadata field below the video player that apparently isn’t scanned by the social media platform.

In the next step, the fraudsters tag Grok in replies to the post, asking something similar to “where is this video from?,” prompting the AI chatbot to visibly display the link in response.

“Adding to that, it is now amplified in SEO and domain reputation – after all, it was echoed by Grok on a post with millions of impressions,” Tal said.

“A malicious link that X explicitly prohibits in ads (and should have been blocked entirely!) suddenly appears in a post by the system-trusted Grok account, sitting under a viral promoted thread and spreading straight into millions of feeds and search results!”

Guardio said the links direct users to sketchy ad networks, sending them to malicious links that push fake CAPTCHA scams, information-stealing malware, and other suspicious content via direct link (aka smartlink) monetization.

The domains are assessed to be part of the same Traffic Distribution System (TDS), which is often used by malicious ad tech vendors to route traffic to harmful or deceptive content.

The cybersecurity company told The Hacker News it has found hundreds of accounts engaging in this behavior over the past few days, with each of them posting hundreds or even thousands of similar posts.

“They seem to be posting non-stop for several days until the account gets suspended for violating platform policies,” it added. “So there are definitely many of them and it looks very organized.”

Found this article interesting? Follow us on Google News, Twitter and LinkedIn to read more exclusive content we post.

 The Hacker News 

Total
0
Shares
Previous Post

Malicious npm Packages Exploit Ethereum Smart Contracts to Target Crypto Developers

Next Post

Ukraine’s cyber chief on Russian hackers’ shifting tactics, US cyber aid

Related Posts

F5 Breach Exposes BIG-IP Source Code — Nation-State Hackers Behind Massive Intrusion

U.S. cybersecurity company F5 on Wednesday disclosed that unidentified threat actors broke into its systems and stole files containing some of BIG-IP's source code and information related to undisclosed vulnerabilities in the product. It attributed the activity to a "highly sophisticated nation-state threat actor," adding the adversary maintained long-term, persistent access to its network. The
Read More

Researchers Warn of Sitecore Exploit Chain Linking Cache Poisoning and Remote Code Execution

Three new security vulnerabilities have been disclosed in the Sitecore Experience Platform that could be exploited to achieve information disclosure and remote code execution.  The flaws, per watchTowr Labs, are listed below - CVE-2025-53693 - HTML cache poisoning through unsafe reflections CVE-2025-53691 - Remote code execution (RCE) through insecure deserialization CVE-2025-53694 -
Read More

Step Into the Password Graveyard… If You Dare (and Join the Live Session)

Every year, weak passwords lead to millions in losses — and many of those breaches could have been stopped. Attackers don’t need advanced tools; they just need one careless login. For IT teams, that means endless resets, compliance struggles, and sleepless nights worrying about the next credential leak. This Halloween, The Hacker News and Specops Software invite you to a live webinar: “
Read More