Hiding in Plain Sight: A Longitudinal Study of Combosquatting Abuse

Nikolaos Pitropakis

Research output: Contribution to conferenceItempeer-review

121 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Domain squatting is a common adversarial practice where attackers register domain names that are purposefully similar to popular domains. In this work, we study a specific type of domain squatting called "combosquatting," in which attackers register domains that combine a popular trademark with one or more phrases (e.g., betterfacebook[.]com, youtube-live[.]com). We perform the first large-scale, empirical study of combosquatting by analyzing more than 468 billion DNS records---collected from passive and active DNS data sources over almost six years. We find that almost 60% of abusive combosquatting domains live for more than 1,000 days, and even worse, we observe increased activity associated with combosquatting year over year. Moreover, we show that combosquatting is used to perform a spectrum of different types of abuse including phishing, social engineering, affiliate abuse, trademark abuse, and even advanced persistent threats. Our results suggest that combosquatting is a real problem that requires increased scrutiny by the security community.
Original languageEnglish
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 30 Oct 2017
Externally publishedYes
EventAssociation of Computer Machinery's Computer and Communications Security (ACM CCS) 2017 -
Duration: 30 Oct 2017 → …

Conference

ConferenceAssociation of Computer Machinery's Computer and Communications Security (ACM CCS) 2017
Period30/10/17 → …

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