Hackers Used Metaβs AI Support Bot to Seize Instagram Accounts
The Instagram accounts for the Obama White House and the Chief Master Sergeant of the U.S. Space Force were briefly defaced with pro-Iranian images and messages over the weekend, after instructions began circulating on Telegram showing how to trick Metaβs βAI support assistantβ bot into resetting account passwords.
A screenshot from a video released on Telegram claiming to show how Metaβs AI customer support bot could be tricked into resetting a targetβs password.
On May 31, word began to spread on several Telegram instant message channels that Metaβs AI bot would happily add an email address to an existing account as part of the botβs standard password reset flow.
A video released on Telegram by pro-Iran hackers claimed to document a remarkably simple exploit that appears to have involved using a VPN connection with an IP address that is in or near the targetβs usual hometown, requesting a password reset for the account, and then choosing to chat with Metaβs AI support assistant. From there, the video shows the attacker told the bot to link the account in question to a new email address, after which the bot dutifully sent that address a one-time code that allowed a password reset.
The Telegram account that posted the video also linked to screenshots of pro-Iran images, videos and messages that defaced the hacked Instagram accounts, saying hackers had used the exploit to hijack a number of valuable (read: short) Instagram account names that allegedly have a resale value of more than a half million dollars.
Meta has not responded to requests for comment on the videoβs claims, but Metaβs Andy Stone said on Twitter/X that the issue had been resolved and that they were securing impacted accounts. The security blog thecybersecguru.com reports that Meta pushed an emergency patch over the weekend, and clarified that no back end database was breached.
βInstagram has notoriously poor human support infrastructure,β Cybersecguru wrote. βRecovering a locked account β especially a high-value one can take weeks of back-and-forth with an automated ticketing system. Metaβs solution was to deploy a conversational AI layer to handle common recovery workflows: relinking a lost email address, triggering a password reset, verifying account ownership. The assistant, presumably, was supposed to reduce friction for legitimate users stuck in account-access hell.β
Ian Goldin, a threat researcher at Lumenβs Black Lotus Labs, said weβre entering unchartered security territory as more large online platforms start allowing AI chatbots to handle sensitive account recovery requests. Just like human customer support employees can be social engineered into providing unauthorized access to someoneβs account, AI bots are equally eager to help and vulnerable to persuasion and trickery, he said.
βAI chatbots create interesting new attack surface, and weβre likely going to see a lot more of these kinds of attacks,β Goldin said.
Securing your various online accounts means taking full advantage of the most secure form of multi-factor authentication (MFA) offered (such as a passkey or security key). In this case, even using the least robust form of MFA that Instagram offers β a one-time code sent via SMS β likely would have blocked the exploit: The hackers who released the video on Telegram said their exploit failed to work against any accounts that had MFA enabled.
