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Fake CISO Profiles of Corporate Giants swamps LinkedIn

LinkedIn has recently been flooded with fake profiles for Chief Information Security Officer (CISO) at some of the world’s largest organizations.

 

LinkedIn has recently been flooded with fake profiles for the post of Chief Information Security Officer (CISO) at some of the world’s largest organizations. 

One such LinkedIn profile is for the CISO of the energy giant, Chevron. One might search for the profile, and find the profile for Victor Sites, stating he is from Westerville, Ohio, and is a graduate of Texas A&M University. When in reality, the role of Chevron is currently occupied by Christopher Lukas, who is based in Danville, Calif. 

According to KrebsOnSecurity, upon searching the profile of “Current CISO of Chevron” on Google, they were led to the fake CISO profile, for it is the first search result returned, followed by the LinkedIn profile of the real Chevron CISO, Christopher Lukas. It was found that the false LinkedIn profiles are engineered to confuse search engine results for the role of CISOs at major organizations, and the profiles are even considered valid by numerous downstream data-scraping sources. 

Similar cases could be seen in the LinkedIn profile for Maryann Robles, claiming to be the CISO of another energy giant, ExxonMobil. LinkedIn was able to detect more such fabricated CISO profiles since the already detected fake profile suggested 1 view a number of them in the “People Also Viewed” column. 


Who is Behind the Fake Profiles? 


Security experts are not yet certain of the identity of the threat actors behind the creation and operation of these fake profiles. Likewise, the intention leading to the cyber security incident also remains unclear.  

LinkedIn, in a statement given to KrebsOnSecurity, said its team is working on tracking the fake accounts and taking down the con men. “We do have strong human and automated systems in place, and we’re continually improving, as fake account activity becomes more sophisticated,” the statement reads. “In our transparency report we share how our teams plus automated systems are stopping the vast majority of fraudulent activity we detect in our community – around 96% of fake accounts and around 99.1% of spam and scam,” said LinkedIn. 

What can LinkedIn do?  


LinkedIn could take simple steps that could inform the user about the profile they are looking at, and whether to trust the given profile. Such as, adding a “created on” date for every profile, and leveraging the user with filtered searches. 

The former CISO Mason of LinkedIn says it could also experiment with offering the user something similar to Twitter’s ‘verified mark’ to those who chose to validate that they can respond to email at the domain linked with their stated current employer. Mason also added LinkedIn needs a more streamlined process allowing employers to remove phony employee accounts.
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