Monday, June 22, 2026

Security Boulevard Logo

Security Boulevard

The Home of the Security Bloggers Network

Community Chats Webinars Library
  • Home
    • Cybersecurity News
    • Features
    • Industry Spotlight
    • News Releases
  • Security Creators Network
    • Latest Posts
    • Syndicate Your Blog
    • Write for Security Boulevard
  • Webinars
    • Upcoming Webinars
    • Calendar View
    • On-Demand Webinars
  • Events
    • Upcoming Events
    • On-Demand Events
  • Sponsored Content
  • Chat
    • Security Boulevard Chat
    • Marketing InSecurity Podcast
    • Techstrong.tv Podcast
    • TechstrongTV - Twitch
  • Library
  • Related Sites
    • Techstrong Group
    • Cloud Native Now
    • DevOps.com
    • Security Boulevard
    • Techstrong Research
    • Techstrong TV
    • Techstrong.tv Podcast
    • Techstrong.tv - Twitch
    • Devops Chat
    • DevOps Dozen
    • DevOps TV
  • Media Kit
  • About
    • Sponsor

  • Analytics
  • AppSec
  • CISO
  • Cloud
  • DevOps
  • GRC
  • Identity
  • Incident Response
  • IoT / ICS
  • Threats / Breaches
  • More
    • Blockchain / Digital Currencies
    • Careers
    • Cyberlaw
    • Mobile
    • Social Engineering
  • Humor
Application Security Security Bloggers Network 

Home » Cybersecurity » Application Security » Five Ways the Gaming & Gambling Industry is Targeted by Bad Bots

SBN

Five Ways the Gaming & Gambling Industry is Targeted by Bad Bots

by Erez Hasson on June 27, 2022

Let’s play a game of chance: What are the odds that your gaming website is being targeted by bad bots? Imperva research suggests they’re higher than you may think. Imperva’s 2022 Bad Bot Report reveals that 53.9 percent of traffic to gaming and gambling websites comes from bad bots. With the remarkable volume of transactions on these websites, it’s little wonder, then, that fraudsters and other cyber criminals leverage sophisticated automation to target them. But how exactly are they targeting this industry, and what are they attempting to achieve by doing so?

  1. Account Takeover (ATO) Fraud: ATO attacks are an increasingly common and costly problem on gaming and gambling websites. Fraudsters use bots to automate brute force login techniques such as Credential Stuffing (OAT-008) and Credential Cracking (OAT-007), in an attempt to take over user accounts belonging to someone else. If successful, an attacker can fraudulently change account details, withdraw funds or loyalty benefits, make online purchases, and because many people reuse their passwords, even access other accounts on different websites. There are extensive damages for the business as well – revenue loss from dissatisfied customers, loss of VIP customers, brand damage, stolen loyalty points, accounts being used for money laundering, increased customer support costs with 2-6 week fraud investigations, increased chargebacks, customer churn, and more.
  2. Odds Scraping (OAT-011 Scraping): Web scraping is the process of using bots to extract content and data from a website. There can be good use cases for web scraping, like search engine crawlers that help create and maintain a searchable index of web pages. But in the gaming and gambling industry, fraudsters use scrapers with malicious intent. Competitors and aggregators scrape betting odds from multiple websites, then use the scraped data to manipulate odds to their own advantage or deliberately promote bets that will be detrimental to a certain business. Another use case of odds scraping is Arbitrage betting. There are bots specifically designed for this, called Arbitrage betting bots. They leverage web scraping to identify and exploit imbalances in the odds between different bookmakers. They then place bets which cover all possible outcomes, which guarantees a profit. This activity increases the chances of the bookmaker being on the losing side and is detrimental to overall gross win percentage.
  3. New User Benefits Abuse (OAT-019 Account Creation): Incentives for new users such as sign-up bonuses or credits are common in the gaming industry. These bonuses are effectively free money that can be leveraged to maximize the player’s profits. Fraudsters target these offers – they use automation to create mass amounts of free accounts, which enables them to reap the rewards multiple times. Without a proper bot management solution, organizations face a challenge in preventing this large-scale account creation fraud, which ultimately hurts their bottom line.
  4. Gaming Automation (OAT-006 Expediting): Expediting is the use of bots to speed through an application’s processes in a manner that is not achievable by legitimate users. This is also known as Betting automation, Game automation, or Gaming bots. Gaming bots are programmed to run until the desired outcome is achieved. Depending on the game, this could be anything from obtaining large amounts of in-game currency, to acquiring rare items, to increasing winning chances in luck-based games. And because bots can continuously play without any breaks, they create an unfair playing field for legitimate players, which in turn leads to player complaints that negatively impact online game service providers’ reputations. Additionally, gaming bots can influence the in-game economy by creating inflation, which shortens the game’s lifecycle and causes a loss in subscription revenue. And it’s even worse if those hackers use fraudulent payments. Overall, expediting bot attacks cause significant brand damage, leading to a decline in user appeal, ultimately driving legitimate players to competitor gaming and gambling providers.
  5. Denial-of-Service (DoS/DDoS) (OAT-015): DDoS attacks are already high up the list of concerns for gaming and gambling websites. But automated application layer attacks are different from volumetric DDoS attacks which manipulate lower-level network protocols. Bot attacks target the application layer (layer 7 of the OSI model). Often, these attacks are a knock-on effect from bots that aggressively target websites, bombarding them with thousands, sometimes even millions of requests. This can lead to slow page-load times or even brownouts and downtime, damaged brand reputation, customer churn and retention issues, loss of future revenue, and more.

Protect your online gaming service from malicious automation with Imperva

Now more than ever, online gaming and gambling services must remain vigilant in protecting user accounts and their balances from account takeover and fraud. Unscrupulous competitors and other nefarious actors are also using bad bots. They scrape betting data, which they then use to capitalize on unique content, perform electronic arbitrage, and create an unfair playing field. If that’s not bad enough already, such aggressive web scraping can also lead to application denial of service, and a poor user experience as a result.

A Leader in The Forrester Wave™: Bot Management, Q2 2022 – Imperva offers bot management that is as adaptable and vigilant as the threat itself. Our Advanced Bot Protection solution is capable of mitigating the most sophisticated automated attacks, including every OWASP automated threat. It leverages superior technology to protect all potential access points, including websites, mobile applications, and APIs, providing you with various response options for bots. And most importantly, it does so without imposing unnecessary friction on legitimate users, maintaining the flow of business-critical traffic to your applications.

Imperva Advanced Bot Protection is part of the market-leading Imperva Web Application & API Protection (WAAP) solution. Start your Application Security Free Trial today to protect your assets from automated threats.

See how BETFRED, a leading UK bookmaker, used Imperva advanced bot protection to reduce traffic from 40 million page requests per day to 15 to 20 million across their digital platform, without impacting site performance for legitimate users. Get the BETFRED case study here.

The post Five Ways the Gaming & Gambling Industry is Targeted by Bad Bots appeared first on Blog.

*** This is a Security Bloggers Network syndicated blog from Blog authored by Erez Hasson. Read the original post at: https://www.imperva.com/blog/five-ways-the-gaming-gambling-industry-is-targeted-by-bad-bots/

June 27, 2022June 27, 2022 Erez Hasson account takeover, advanced bot protection, Application Security, ddos, Digest, gaming industry, OWASP Top 10, web scraping
  • ← Hermit Previews Sophisticated Spyware To Come
  • Why Would My Startup Be At Risk For Cybersecurity →

Techstrong TV

Click full-screen to enable volume control
Watch latest episodes and shows

Tech Field Day Events

Upcoming Webinars

True Agentic SecOps at Lakehouse Scale
Agentic Software Delivery in 2026: How To Bridge The Gap Between AI Ambition and Delivery Confidence
Untangling the EU Cyber Resilience Act
The Software Supply Chain Just Got Harder to See
Building a Resilient Security Culture in the AI Era with AWS & Datadog

Podcast

Listen to all of our podcasts

Secure by Design

3 weeks ago | Jack Poller

Senator Sanders Wants to Own AI Companies — and Hand America’s Adversaries the Keys

4 weeks ago | Jack Poller

NIST’s Nine: The PQC Signature Race Moves to Round Three

4 weeks ago | Jack Poller

The Quantum Arms Race: Why Washington Just Wrote a $2 Billion Check to Nine Companies

1 month ago | Jack Poller

Beyond Moore’s Law: The Hyper-Acceleration of Autonomous AI Cyber Capabilities

1 month ago | Jack Poller

The Exception Economy: When Security Teams Stop Protecting and Start Negotiating

Press Releases

GoPlus's Latest Report Highlights How Blockchain Communities Are Leveraging Critical API Security Data To Mitigate Web3 Threats

GoPlus’s Latest Report Highlights How Blockchain Communities Are Leveraging Critical API Security Data To Mitigate Web3 Threats

C2A Security’s EVSec Risk Management and Automation Platform Gains Traction in Automotive Industry as Companies Seek to Efficiently Meet Regulatory Requirements

C2A Security’s EVSec Risk Management and Automation Platform Gains Traction in Automotive Industry as Companies Seek to Efficiently Meet Regulatory Requirements

Zama Raises $73M in Series A Lead by Multicoin Capital and Protocol Labs to Commercialize Fully Homomorphic Encryption

Zama Raises $73M in Series A Lead by Multicoin Capital and Protocol Labs to Commercialize Fully Homomorphic Encryption

RSM US Deploys Stellar Cyber Open XDR Platform to Secure Clients

RSM US Deploys Stellar Cyber Open XDR Platform to Secure Clients

ThreatHunter.ai Halts Hundreds of Attacks in the past 48 hours: Combating Ransomware and Nation-State Cyber Threats Head-On

ThreatHunter.ai Halts Hundreds of Attacks in the past 48 hours: Combating Ransomware and Nation-State Cyber Threats Head-On

Subscribe to our Newsletters

Most Read on the Boulevard

MSG Breach: Knicks Take the NBA Championship, ShinyHunters Takes the Data 
F5 Embeds Neural Network in WAF Platform to Continuously Assess Risks
France to Stop Certifying Products Without Quantum-Safe Encryption in 2027
Trying to Control AI is Like Holding Sand
Barracuda Networks Enlists AI to Protect Email Systems
FortiBleed Leak Exposes VPN Credentials for Nearly 74,000 Fortinet Devices
Kodak Confirms Data Breach Claimed by ShinyHunters Extortion Gang
GitHub Locks Down npm: What the New Install Defaults Mean for Your Supply Chain
973 MCP Packages, 71% Single-Maintainer: A Practitioner’s Guide to AI Developer Security
Novo Nordisk Reports Cybersecurity Breach Affecting Clinical Trial Patients

Industry Spotlight

NYC Sewers Crawling With Rats and Potential Bad Actors 
Cybersecurity Featured Industry Spotlight Security Awareness Security Boulevard (Original) Social - Facebook Social - LinkedIn Social - X Spotlight Threats & Breaches 

NYC Sewers Crawling With Rats and Potential Bad Actors 

June 18, 2026 Teri Robinson | 3 days ago 0
Anthropic Mythos AI Model Strikes Fear in Trump Administration, U.S. Banks
Cloud Security Cybersecurity Data Privacy Data Security Featured Incident Response Industry Spotlight Malware Mobile Security Network Security News Security Awareness Security Boulevard (Original) Social - Facebook Social - LinkedIn Social - X Spotlight Threats & Breaches Vulnerabilities 

Anthropic Mythos AI Model Strikes Fear in Trump Administration, U.S. Banks

April 12, 2026 Jeffrey Burt | Apr 12 Comments Off on Anthropic Mythos AI Model Strikes Fear in Trump Administration, U.S. Banks
The Day the Security Music Died
AI and Machine Learning in Security Cybersecurity Featured Industry Spotlight Security Boulevard (Original) Social - Facebook Social - LinkedIn Social - X Spotlight 

The Day the Security Music Died

April 8, 2026 Alan Shimel | Apr 08 Comments Off on The Day the Security Music Died

Top Stories

Job Seekers Make for Vulnerable Targets
Cybersecurity Data Privacy Data Security Featured News Security Awareness Security Boulevard (Original) Social - Facebook Social - LinkedIn Social - X Spotlight 

Job Seekers Make for Vulnerable Targets

June 19, 2026 Teri Robinson | 2 days ago 0
MSG Breach: Knicks Take the NBA Championship, ShinyHunters Takes the Data 
Cybersecurity Data Security Featured News Security Boulevard (Original) Social - Facebook Social - LinkedIn Social - X Spotlight 

MSG Breach: Knicks Take the NBA Championship, ShinyHunters Takes the Data 

June 18, 2026 Teri Robinson | 3 days ago 0
Trying to Control AI is Like Holding Sand
AI and Machine Learning in Security Cybersecurity Featured News Security Boulevard (Original) Social - Facebook Social - LinkedIn Social - X Spotlight 

Trying to Control AI is Like Holding Sand

June 17, 2026 Alan Shimel | 4 days ago 0

Security Humor

Fortinet® Follies

Fortinet® Follies

Download Free eBook

[su_panel border="0px solid #ddd" radius="0" text_align="center" padding-top="0px" padding-bottom="0px"]
The Dangers of Open Source Software and Best Practices for Securing Code
[/su_panel]

Security Boulevard Logo White

DMCA

Join the Community

  • Add your blog to Security Creators Network
  • Write for Security Boulevard
  • Bloggers Meetup and Awards
  • Ask a Question
  • Email: [email protected]

Useful Links

  • About
  • Media Kit
  • Sponsor Info
  • Copyright
  • TOS
  • DMCA Compliance Statement
  • Privacy Policy

Related Sites

  • Techstrong Group
  • Cloud Native Now
  • DevOps.com
  • Digital CxO
  • Techstrong Research
  • Techstrong TV
  • Techstrong.tv Podcast
  • DevOps Chat
  • DevOps Dozen
  • DevOps TV
Powered by Techstrong Group
Copyright © 2026 Techstrong Group Inc. All rights reserved.
×

Insert/edit link

Enter the destination URL

Or link to existing content

    No search term specified. Showing recent items. Search or use up and down arrow keys to select an item.