Hackers have taken over a subdomain of wired.com, and used it to promote an Indonesian online casino. Wired does not appear to be able to kick them out.
, it's an attack in which "threat actors compromise the DNS of a legitimate domain to host their own subdomains for use in malicious activity but do not modify the legitimate DNS entries that already exist."
"If I'm a criminal, and I register bobsmith.wired.com, and it never existed, and somehow hacked the DNS to put it in, then it's a new subdomain, so I may pick up some credibility from the fact that it's a subdomain off of," he wrote. "But if it's an old site, then for sure, I'm gonna get credibility, because it probably has many things linking to it already.
"These are all attempts to use somebody else's brand name, somebody else's infrastructure that was created in the past, someone else's SEO benefit from content they created, somebody else's credibility," Steinberg said.
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