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ICANN Domains Hijacked: related news

ICANN Domains Hijacked

The Associated Press reports that ICANN, the California company in charge of the Internet's addresses -- apparently can't even keep track of its own. According to ICANN, they lost control of the ICANN.com and IANA.com domains when an Internet registration company it oversees was tricked into transferring the domain names to someone else. ICANN only lost control of the domains for around twenty minutes or so, though the problem impacted users for several days.

If ICANN Can't Even Control Its Own Domain Names...

ICANN has been something of a joke. Charged with managing top level domain names, the organization has done a lot more to annoy users and force them to keep buying new domain names at high prices than do anything constructive in managing TLDs. And now it turns out that even ICANN can get spoofed. Hoaxers convinced ICANN's own registrar to hand over the controls for two of its main websites: ICANN.com and IANA.com, allowing each to be redirected elsewhere briefly. While ICANN was able to regain control over both domains within 20 minutes, the ease with which both were hijacked suggests that perhaps a more constructive use of ICANN's time, rather than coming up with new TLDs that cost too much money, would be to come up with better ways to prevent such hijackings -- and better ways to deal with such hijackings if you don't happen to be ICAN

ICANN Struggles With Transparency

ICANN has made major strides towards increasing its transparency, but the point about openness and transparency is that you do it all the time, not just when its convenient or when the results won't challenge you. In that regard we find it interesting that ICM Registry's precedent-setting call for an Independent Review Panel has not seen the light anywhere on ICANN's website. ICM Registry, you will recall, was the applicant for the .xxx TLD, and due to interference by governments and some spinelessness by ICANN management ICANN's approval was reversed. ICM has chosen to become the first entity in history to attempt to use ICANN's Independent Review Process, something that ICANN touts as being a safeguard of its accountability but which some independent experts see as somewhat biased against the challenger.

IANA and ICANN domains get hijacked

Instead of reaching the official websites of iana.com, iana-servers.com, icann.com, and icann.net, web requests were hijacked to a web page apparently put up by the miscreants responsible for hijacking them.

ICANN says hijacking attack due to breach at their registrar

As we commented on, ICANN, the group that manages top-level domain (TLD) naming systems for the web, recently had several of its domains hijacked by a Turkish hacking group. ICANN has now commented that the hijacking was due to a security breach at the registrar that manages those URLs. From ICANN’s site:

ICANN Loses Control of Its Own Domain Names

NotNormallyNormal writes "CBC picked up an AP story about ICANN recently losing control over two of their domain names on Thursday, June 26. A domain registrar run by the group transferred the domains to someone else. ICANN's press release had this to say: 'As has been widely reported, a number of domain names, including icann.com and iana.com were recently redirected to different DNS servers, allowing a group to provide visitors to those domains with their own website. It would appear the attack was sophisticated, combining both social and technological techniques, but was also limited and focused.' Comcast has had similar troubles lately as well."

IANA and ICANN domains get hijacked

Egan Orion the Inquirer, Monday 30 June 2008. 07:57:00 If it can happen to them... NEWS SURFACED late Friday that four domains owned by IANA and ICANN had been briefly redirected.

Turkish Group Says It Hijacked ICANN Domain Names

The domains used by ICANN, the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers, and IANA, the Internet Assigned Numbers Authority, were hijacked. A Turkish hacking group known as NetDevilz claimed responsibility. There is no word on how the hijack was accomplished.

Danchev: ICANN and IANA domain names hijacked

The official domains of the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN) and the Internet Assigned Numbers Authority (IANA) were hijacked by the NetDevilz Turkish hacking group.

ICANN says registrar was hacked

Two weeks after ICANN’s own domains were hijacked by Turkish hackers, the International Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers says it was its registrar — not ICANN’s servers themselves — that were attacked.

ICANN and IANA Websites Hacked

June 30, 2008 (HOSTSEARCH.COM) The websites of the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN) and the Internet Assigned Numbers Authority (IANA) have been hacked, it was reported recently. Visitors to certain pages were redirected to an atspace.com (http://www.atspace.com/) account where they were greeted by the following message: "You think that you control the domains but you don't! Everybody knows wrong. We control the domains including ICANN! Don't you believe us?"

Multiple Domains; One Site

I have 3 domains forwarding to my optimized site. I bought the domains a few weeks ago and I noticed that they have a few back links, now since I forward those domains to my mains website Google is counting them as back links for my main site. Since this works should I buy awhole bunch of domains with back links and forward them to my site???

ICANN backs custom domains, gives brand-owners nightmares

The board of ICANN, the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers, backed the move at a meeting in Paris yesterday. Presently, users have a limited range of 21 top-level domains (TLDs) to choose from, like .com, .org, .info.

ICANN sites owned by Turkish criminal hackers

On Thursday, the domains used by ICANN, the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers, and IANA, the Internet Assigned Numbers Authority, were hijacked. A Turkish hacking group known as NetDevilz claimed =responsibility. There is no word on how the hijack was accomplished.

ICANN to Hold Auctions for Disputes

August 19, 2008 -- (WEB HOST INDUSTRY REVIEW) -- International Internet regulation body ICANN (icann.org) announced this week that it will handle any disagreements over who wins the right to new generic top level domains by auction.

ICANN Blames Register.com for Hack

July 8, 2008 -- (WEB HOST INDUSTRY REVIEW) -- Searching for explanations for last month's high-profile hack, a ICANN (icann.org) spokesperson said that the site hijacking of several of its domains was due to a security leak at the registrar that manages those sites - identified as Register.com (register.com).

ICANN: .anything is the next domain craze

Marketers, tighten those caps! The Internet is about to get just a little bit more exciting - or maybe the word is confusing. The Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN) has voted to open up the registration for domains such as “.anything” domains.

Hackers hijack ICANN sites

On Thursday, the domains used by ICANN, the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers, and IANA, the Internet Assigned Numbers Authority, were hijacked to redirect users to a protest message.

Hackers hijack ICANN sites

On Thursday, the domains used by ICANN, the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers, and IANA, the Internet Assigned Numbers Authority, were hijacked to redirect users to a protest message.

Turkish criminal hackers hijack ICANN sites

On Thursday, the domains used by ICANN, the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers, and IANA, the Internet Assigned Numbers Authority, were hijacked. A Turkish hacking group known as NetDevilz claimed =responsibility. There is no word on how the hijack was accomplished.

KENIC reduces cost of '.ke' domains

Kenya Network Information Centre (KENIC), the administrator of .ke top-level domains has reduced the cost of noncommercial domains and plans to reduce the cost of all domains within three years.

KENIC Reduces Cost of '.Ke' Domains

Kenya Network Information Centre (KENIC), the administrator of .ke top-level domains has reduced the cost of noncommercial domains and plans to reduce the cost of all domains within three years.

ICANN Approved Recommendation

The Board of ICANN approved a recommendation that could see a range of new names introduced to the Internet's addressing system. A final version of the implementation plan must be approved by the ICANN Board before the new process is launched. It is intended that the final version will be published in early 2009. This proposal allows applicants for new names to self-select their domain name so that choices are most appropriate for their customers or potentially the most marketable. There will be a limited application period where any established entity from anywhere in the world can submit an application that will go through an evaluation process.


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