YouTube is eroticize 1983turning passive viewers into cryptocurrency miners, and Google isn't happy.
The issue became apparent earlier in the week as complaints surfaced on social media claiming that YouTube ads were raising red flags in anti-virus software. A service called Coinhive was hijacking a viewer's CPU and using its power to mine crypto.
SEE ALSO: CryptoCelebrities are the newest irritating kid on the blockchainA Friday blog post from Trend Micro, an international cybersecurity company, confirmed the sharp uptick in Coinhive use earlier in the week, pinning it to a "malvertising campaign" that subverted a Google ad service used on YouTube.
"Attackers abused Google’s DoubleClick, which develops and provides internet ad serving services, for traffic distribution," the post notes. Trend Micro's data pointed to Japan, France, Taiwan, Italy, and Spain as the countries affected by the campaign.
In a statement given to Ars Technica on Friday, Google confirmed the cryptojacking threat, noting that "[i]n this case, the ads were blocked in less than two hours and the malicious actors were quickly removed from our platforms."
Google's "blocked in less than two hours" timeline doesn't add up, however. Trend Micro's data suggests that "an increase in traffic to five malicious domains" from DoubleClick advertisements started on or sometime before Jan. 18. By Jan. 24, the company had detected "an almost 285% increase in the number of Coinhive miners."
Google didn't respond to any follow-up questions regarding the timeline.
Coinhive wasn't always used for nefarious purposes. The script was created originally to let website owners harness the processing power of a visitor's computer to mine Monero. So long as the site owner let people know about Coinhive up front and didn't let the script monopolize processing power, it was a relatively ethical way for website operators to turn traffic into income.
Then, in late December, users of a certain Chrome extension discovered that it was also secretly running CoinHive. This incident quickly turned into one of the higher profile examples of a relatively new phenomenon in the malware world: "cryptojacking," the practice of hijacking a PC user's CPU to mine cryptocurrency.
The spread of cryptojacking to YouTube is an alarming development. While it's good that Google eventually shut the activity down, this is a new wrinkle in the cryptocurrency craze that internet gatekeepers will have to better protect against in the future.
Topics Cybersecurity Google YouTube Cryptocurrency Innovations
Social media is the new bodycamJohn Krasinski’s 'Some Good News' was more than just a show — it was a life raft'Succession' Season 4, episode 4: What's the deal with Logan's paper?Apple might announce new MacBooks at WWDCNetflix to finally stop sending DVDs by mailJudy Blume tweets support of LGBTQ community after J.K. Rowling controversy'Quordle' today: See each 'Quordle' answer and hints for April 18Kay Ryan Wins Pulitzer by Lorin SteinUntil Next Year ... by Thessaly La ForceFrancisco Goldman on ‘Say Her Name’ by Lila ByockFacebook privacy settlement: Find out if Facebook owes you money and how to collect itDavid Orr: Lost in the Archives, Spring 1974 by David Orr'Succession' Season 4, episode 4: What's the deal with Logan's paper?Netflix to finally stop sending DVDs by mailA Big Week! by Thessaly La Force'Stardew Valley' is getting an update with 'new game content'White House protesters were tear gassed because Trump wanted to create photo opPhilip Connors on 'Fire Season' by Maud NewtonYoram Kaniuk on 'Life on Sandpaper' by Joshua CohenThe real impact of not having been touched in months Carlos Fuentes, 1928–2012 by Sadie Stein Siegfried and Roy: Masters of the Kitchen Browning at 200, Publishers at 83 by Sadie Stein Rushdie Is Bored, Pynchon Goes Public by Sadie Stein In Memoriam: Marina Keegan by The Paris Review Ray Bradbury, 1920–2012 by The Paris Review Authors in Bathing Suits by Sadie Stein Mad Man by Lary Wallace What We're Loving: Girls, Cribs, and Literary Detective Work by The Paris Review Dear Betty Draper Francis, Stop Weighing Your Food by Adam Wilson Adaptation: An Interview with Ramona Ausubel by Samantha Hunt America's Newest Sweetheart by Andrew Palmer The 1966: Spring’s Smartest Tee by Sadie Stein As Ever by Sadie Stein At the Grave of Richard Hugo by Alice Bolin Owls, Hatred, and Blurbese by Sadie Stein Burning Books, Listening to Just Kids, Casting Fleming by Sadie Stein Tim Parks, Milan, Italy by Matteo Pericoli Best Samsung deal: Save $50 on the Galaxy Watch FE at Amazon A Great Stag, Broad
2.9539s , 8282.9375 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【eroticize 1983】,Steady Information Network