Information Highwaymen and Your Domain
Information Highwaymen and Your Domain
You go to work every day at the store you own, and one morning, your key
to the door doesn't work. You look in the window, and the display items
have changed. A stranger is behind the counter. But when you call the police,
they can't do anything because the company papers now indicate that the
store belongs to the stranger.
The above scenario isn't likely to happen with a bricks-and-mortar store.
Because of insecurities in the domain registration system, however, information
highwaymen could take over your online business.
As with identity theft, domain thieves steal your identity -- the identity
used to register and configure your domain name. After that, your website,
your email, your online business, and possibly your reputation are theirs.
Domain names at risk of theft
While theft is a risk with all domain names, domains most at risk are more
valuable ones. Domains with dot com extensions have a higher resale value
than domains with other extensions, and domains with high traffic or valuable
keywords are also more likely to be targets.
The motive behind domain hijacking is usually monetary, but it may be personal.
If anyone wants to attack you, stealing your domain name is one way to do
it.
How domain theft happens
When domain hijackers steal your domain, they gain access to the domain's Whois records.
They can modify the domain's nameservers so that the domain points to a
different server. They can also transfer the domain to a different registrar.
Either way, site visitors will find themselves at the website of the domain
hijacker instead of at your site. All domain email will go to or through
the other server instead of to you. All you'll have left is a website without
public access because your domain isn't pointing to it any more.
How can this happen?
Domain hijacking methods
• Domain hijackers send forged faxes to the domain registrar, impersonating
the registrants.
• Domain hijackers hack into the accounts of free email addresses
listed in Whois records and use those addresses to obtain domain account
information.
• Domain hijackers send out fraudulent email renewal notices, and registrants
unknowingly transfer their domains to the thieves.
Registrar non-action
• The gaining registrar (the registrar that the domain is transferred
to) doesn't obtain approval from the domain name registrant or administrative
contact as required by ICANN Inter-Registrar
Transfer Policy.
• The losing registrar (that the domain is transferred from) doesn't
notify the registrant of the transfer during the five-day pending transfer
period. During this period, the registrant can cancel or deny approval of
the domain transfer --- if the registrar notifies the registrant of it.
Registrant carelessness
• The registrant forgets to update Whois details or to renew the account.
• Someone with access to the registrant's records steals the information.
Domain name disputes
If you discover that your domain has been hijacked, contact your registrar
immediately. If your registrar is unable to resolve the situation, the ICANN
(Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers) Transfer
Dispute Resolution Policy (TDRP) applies.
By going the above arbitration route, you don't have to argue your case
in person. On the other hand, all you can get back in the process is your
domain (and not necessarily that). For a lot more money, you can take your
case to court, where you can seek compensation for damages in addition to
the return of your domain. This process takes more time, however.
You may be able to proceed both ways – get your domain back via ICANN
domain dispute resolution procedures and then go to court to collect damages.
You can also appeal a domain arbitrator's decision in court.
How to protect your domain name
Protecting a domain name is similar to protecting a bricks-and-mortar store
from burglary. With a combination of precautions in place, thieves will
find it difficult or impossible to gain access.
Your domain account information
• List your name for the administrative contact, and use your full
name.
• Create a complex password with letters (both upper case and lower
case) and numbers. Don't use any real words or personal information in it.
Make it long. Make it unique – don't use the same password for anything
else. Change it periodically.
• Keep your domain login name, account number, and password in a place
where only trusted people can access it.
• Use a valid contact email address that doesn't use the domain it's
for. Be sure that this email account also has a complex password. If you're
going to be offline for more than a few days, have someone else check the
email for this account.
• Don't use a free email address such as a Hotmail or Yahoo address.
Domain hijackers target domains with free email addresses in the Whois records.
After they've cracked your email account password, the support you need
to get your email account back will probably be slow, giving the hijackers
plenty of time to take over your domain.
• Update your Whois record whenever the information in it changes.
Your domain account features
• Choose a domain registrar that sends registrants transfer pending
notifications when a domain transfer is taking place.
• Consider protecting your Whois details with a registrar that offers
a private domain name record. With this feature, your registrar's data appears
with your Whois record rather than your data. The downside of using this
feature is that your business may have less credibility because you're hiding
who you are.
• Register your domain for a long time period, and set up calendar
reminders to renew it before it expires.
• Set up your domain to be renewed automatically if your registrar
offers this feature.
• Use the Registrar-lock mechanism if it's available through your
registrar. When a domain is locked, it cannot be modified or transferred
unless the registrant unlocks it or follows the domain transfer process.
Other domain security measures
• Set up a free Whois monitoring
alert email service and add your domain to your monitoring list. You
will receive email notifications whenever the expiration date, registrar,
or status of a monitored domain changes. (Whois does not have data on all
domain extensions.)
• Make sure that someone checks your website every few days, preferably
daily.
About the Author
Technical Writer WebsiteSource.com, Austin
sales@websitesource.com As
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