6 thoughts on “Why Phishers Love New TLDs Like .shop, .top and .xyz

  1. suggestion

    Your Mastodon is linked at the bottom of each page, but you should move it to the top with an icon like your Twitter, LinkedIn, and RSS.

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  2. Impossibly Stupid

    > “Any action upstream, such as blocking the second-level domain, would have an impact across the provider’s whole customer base,” the report observes.

    *Good!* Anyone turning a blind eye to abuse needs to be removed from the Internet. They’re all certainly getting stuck in my own firewall, up to and including these pop-up TLDs. Wildcard matches on a Pi-hole are a beautiful thing.

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  3. Dave

    All my spam comes from namecheap.com hosting .news and a few from .com & .net.

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  4. Josh Woods

    I have no problem blocking a domain hosting malicious subdomains. As far as I’m concerned, they brought it upon themselves by refusing to deal with the issue and have only themselves to blame.

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  5. Robin Norris, CISSP

    .xyz has been a cesspool since the beginning.
    Namecheap is one of the worst registrars from a cybersecurity perspective. Business web proxies should block domains registered there by default.
    That said, in the last few years I have seen more phishing related threats from popped email accounts, popped legitimated web servers, and popped accounts on marketing services. Most businesses are good at blocking new registration domains and sketchy gTLDs. The bigger threat is BEC and popped legitimate web spaces.

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