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09/25/2025

AutoBots: The Good, The Bad, The Ugly

Source: aftermarket MATTERS

No, these are not the heroic robots of the Hasbro toyline of comic creatures, automotive AutoBots run without restraint on social networks including X (formerly Twitter), Instagram, Facebook, TikTok, YouTube and even government websites.

Automotive AutoBots can perform neutral or helpful functions, such as customer scheduling or answering questions. However, a large and growing subset exists to generate fake engagement, spread falsehoods and promote spam or fraud.

Auto shops that depend on social channels to connect with customers or drive campaigns face increasing difficulty separating customer interactions from artificial noise. Malicious AutoBots can impersonate users, distort metrics, manipulate public sentiment and divert advertising.

Organizations such as Cloudflare and the Cybersecurity & Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) have highlighted social media bots as key players of misinformation and fraud. Whether managing a media effort or defending a global reputation, the automotive service and repair industry confronts a clear mandate: recognize and mitigate the influence of social media before it distorts the truth or damages your business.

The Good:

By allowing AutoBots, you make it easy for customers to search for your services. Website discovery, also known as web crawling or spidering, is a process in which a shop’s computer systematically discovers and indexes topics on other websites.

A well-structured website with logical internal linking can help customers navigate and index pages more efficiently, improving overall Search Engine Optimization (SEO) performance.

The Bad:

AutoBots, while offering legitimate benefits for auto shops like market analysis and competitive intelligence, can be for harmful purposes. Here are ways “bad actors” use websites: 

While legitimate crawlers respect “robots.txt” files that indicate areas off-limits for scraping, malicious crawlers will ignore them, potentially trying to exploit vulnerabilities in a website’s security to access sensitive data, like customer databases or proprietary business information.

The Ugly:

Below are examples of how bad actors or groups can use AutoBots:

Takeaway:

Automotive shops must take steps to protect themselves from malicious software:

By understanding the potential risks and adopting initiative-taking measures, automotive shops can harness the benefits of online visibility while safeguarding their business from the malicious use of AutoBots.

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