Website spoofing

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Web Design & Development Guide

Website spoofing

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Website spoofing is the act of creating a website, as a hoax, with the intention of misleading readers that the website has been created by a different person or organisation. Normally, the website will adopt the design of the target website and sometimes has a similar URL.[1]

Another technique is to use a 'cloaked' URL. By using domain forwarding, or inserting control characters, the URL can appear to be genuine while concealing the address of the actual website.[2]

The objective may be fraudulent, often associated with phishing or e-mail spoofing, or to criticize or make fun of the person or body whose website the spoofed site purports to represent.[3]

As an example of the use of this technique to parody an organization, in November 2006 two spoof websites were produced claiming that Microsoft had bought Firefox and released Microsoft Firefox 2007.[4]

References

  1. ^ "Spoof website will stay online", BBC News, 29 July 2004
  2. ^ Anti-Phishing Technology", Aaron Emigh, Radix Labs, 19 January 2005
  3. ^ "How to recognize spoofed Web sites", Microsoft, 26 October 2006
  4. ^ " Fake Sites Insist Microsoft Bought Firefox ", Gregg Keizer, Information Week, 9 November 2006

External links


Home | Up | Browser exploit | Cross-site cooking | Cross-site request forgery | Cross-site scripting | Cross-zone scripting | Directory traversal | Evil twin (wireless networks) | HTTP response splitting | IDN homograph attack | Referer spoofing | Session fixation | Session poisoning | Website spoofing

Web Design & Development Guide, made by MultiMedia | Websites for sale

This guide is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia.

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