Satnam Narang, staff research Engineer at Tenable, the Cyber Exposure company, found dozens of compromised social media accounts that peddled fake cryptocurrency scams in the lead up to SpaceX and Tesla CEO Elon Musk’s appearance on NBC’s Saturday Night Light. Narang estimates that scammers netted over $10 million between May 7-9. Narang’s analysis revealed that scammers stole over $9.4 million in Dogecoin, $609,000 Bitcoin, and at least $423,000 Ethereum.

Most victims scammed by videos on YouTube

Popular YouTube account Wave Music Bhojpuri, a channel with 18.9 million subscribers, was hijacked during the scam campaign. Other compromised YouTube channels were also observed in the United States, Brazil, Germany, Indonesia, the Philippines, Saudi Arabia, and Kazakhstan to promote phoney cryptocurrency giveaways. The largest single grossing Dogecoin address used in these campaigns was a YouTube Live video linked to dogecoin-snl.com. One particular compromised YouTube channel operated by a scammer rotated multiple domains and wallet addresses to scam $1.6 million dollars in Dogecoin. The videos on this channel comprised nearly 2,000,000 viewers across several live streams. Commenting on the success of these scam campaigns, Narang said that there’s an urgent need for heightened cybersecurity measures within social media organisations. He then underlined that social media organisations should enforce two-factor authentication on verified accounts with large numbers of followers or subscribers. Additionally, they need to scrutinise such accounts because verified badges are invaluable, not just to notable figures, but also the people who rely on them to identify fact from fiction. Watch the video: Elon Musk Monologue – SNL Featured image via Saturday Night Live YouTube.