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We are excited to announce that we recently upgraded our Typosquatting Data Feed. This innovative release provides improved typosquatting detection and extended coverage to further empower the identification of suspicious domain registrations.
There is a tremendous number of domain names registered daily which resemble legitimate domains of brands or organizations, or whose names imply being related to a known service or product. Domains suggesting to be a “support” or “account-verification” or “support page” are also common for containing such strings. Initially, many of these are parked and some become used in malicious activities such as being sold at an inflated price to the legitimate owner, being used as botnet Command & Control servers, or in phishing campaigns to host fake pages to have the victim's sensitive data typed in and sent to the miscreants.
It seems trivial to remind users of the Word Wide Web that they should be very cautious when following a link they have received in a message. But it is not the case: as the Web is used by people from diverse cultures, education, and technical backgrounds, phishing can harvest its victims. To say nothing of botnets: a bot is a hidden piece of software and thus it uses DNS queries to find its C&C server without any notification to the user.
Charles Caleb Colton once said that imitation was the sincerest form of flattery. This proverbial expression finds its origins in the 19th century and other historical writings before that. What likely wasn’t foreseen at the time, however, was that certain forms of imitation in the 21st century could give organizations terrible headaches. We are talking about domain spoofing and homograph attacks.
Imitators in our contemporary context can register one or several domain names highly similar to that of an established brand and use these to deceive people and trick them into sharing sensitive information or even transfering funds to fraudulent bank accounts.
Registering copycat domain names of known brands and organizations isn’t the only way to fool victims, though. At the height of coronavirus-themed attacks, the Typosquatting Data Feed proved useful in spotting potentially dangerous footprints containing thousands of domain names with word strings such as “covid” and “coronavirus” combined with “mask,” “vaccine,” “donation,” “lawsuit,” and plenty of others.
In this post, we put the feed’s capabilities to the test to detect spoofed domain names, including Punycode domains, that could be used to abuse employees, customers, and other parties who regularly interact with Lloyds Bank and Apple. We will also show how other sources of intelligence can help learn more about possible impersonators and the infrastructure they use.
The Typosquatting Data Feed list groups of domains that have been registered on the same day, and whose names are similar to each other within the group. A question might be: why buy such data. Here we illustrate the power of the data set through a very efficient application to detect malicious domains. A simple Python code will be presented to illustrate how it works. Then we will illustrate its efficiency by applying it to the PhishTank data feed, demonstrating that it is capable of revealing a tremendous amount of additional domains.
Detection of malicious domains is an important and hard task in IT security. It is the major ingredient of protection against phishing, malware, botnet activity, etc. The most reliable approach to the problem is the use of blacklists such as PhishTank or URLhaus, where a community or a specialized group of experts publish a list of domains or URLs that are confirmed to be malicious. PhishTank, for instance, is community operated: a number of benevolent activists do a great favor to all of us by checking suspicious domains and reveal their phishing activity.
A blacklist of domains is not only useful for direct use in firewalls or spam filters though. It can also serve as an input for methods that can find additional domains strongly related to the blacklisted ones, thus being suspicious. By "amplification" of a blacklist we mean its extension with such a method. With WhoisXML API's recently introduced Typosquatting Data Feed such an amplification can be easily achieved. Some of the domains in the original blacklist will turn out to be the "top of the iceberg": we shall find a relevant set of related domains.
Early Typosquatting Detection Made Possible: A Short Illustration in the Financial Sector
To those who keep an eye on trends in IT security threats, notably phishing and typosquatting attacks, the name
Wells Fargo is not unfamiliar, not even to those who have no business relation whatsoever with this
multinational financial services company. In fact, all financial companies are likely targets for phishing
campaigns, and Wells Fargo had TCPA settlement cases which are amongst the greatest attractors of these kinds of
threats. So, rather unsurprisingly, there has been a continuous and significant malicious activity against this
company.
The footprint of coronavirus disease in domain name registrations
Cybercriminals use all possibilities which can serve their evil aims. They follow the headlines and react quickly
– and they do not have ethical considerations. Even the drama of the coronavirus terrorizing the entire world
and causing the deaths of thousands of people is seen as a good ’business’ opportunity to spread out some
malware.
IBM X-force recently reported that the coronavirus went cyber via the Emotet trojan. Rather disgustingly, the
miscreants send e-mails to people on behalf of respected health organizations, containing attachments claiming
to inform about infection prevention measures. As the victim opens the attachment, it silently installs the
trojan on the computer.
Traditional phishers are also on board, a typical case is described by Kaspersky: a coronavirus-related message
containing a link to an Outlook-looking page to collect login credentials. All this has attracted a lot of media
attention, of course...
TCPA settlements in the crosshairs of typosquatters
The Telephone Consumer Protection Act of 1991 (TCPA), Public Law 102-243., as also explained on its
Wikipedia page, "restricts telephone solicitations (i.e., telemarketing & BPO) and the use of automated telephone equipment. The
TCPA limits the use of automatic dialing systems, artificial or pre-recorded voice messages, SMS text messages, and
fax machines."
Naturally, it has generated a number of court cases, which frequently result in calls for settlement claims. Victims
can submit their claim online, either directly, or with the help of a number of lawyers and their companies
specializing in helping with such cases. The related web pages attract a lot of visitors, and many of them type in
the URL of the case manually - a very attractive situation to do some typosquatting… leaving a footprint of TCPA
settlements in the records of WhoisXML API'sTyposquatting Data Feed.
Typosquatting Daily Data Feed: the new enabler in the fight against phishing and malware
One result of our reseach and development is the introduction of the new "typosquatting data feed", an innovative
data set based on our long-standing experience with cybersecurity and the Domain Name System. In what follows we
will demonstrate how this new resource can be used efficiently in the fight against spam, phishing and
malware.
The main idea behind the new data feed is the observation that domain names which were registered on the same day
and have similar names have an increased likelihood of being involved in a range of IT scams, including
typosquatting attacks, domain name hijacking, and also phishing and malware. So, we have developed a technology
for finding these groups of domain names.