Domain Hijacking -A Way to Steal
Your Domain
Domain hijacking is the
process by which internet domains are basically stolen. Many people confuse domain
hijacking with the reuse of an expired domain.
Domain hijacking
is the process by which internet domains are basically stolen. Many people confuse
domain hijacking with the reuse of an expired domain. One is a legal process and
one is not. Domain hijacking is theft, reuse of an expired domain is opportunity
usage. Domain theft is an aggressive form of domain hijacking that usually involves
an illegal act. In most cases, identity theft is used to trick the domain registrar
into allowing the hijacker to change the registration information to steal control
of an unexpired domain from the legitimate owner.
- In domain hijacking
or domain slamming for some reason, you can’t get into your own domain, you’re
not receiving email from that domain, and you discover that it’s now registered
to someone else. Needless to say, to a small online business this can be devastating.
- It
could happen for a number of reasons. Maybe you have a particularly valuable domain
name that someone wants to sell. In fact, .com domains are supposedly more likely
to be stolen than any others. It’s also possible, though unlikely, that whoever
stole your domain did it as an attack on your business or you personally.
- This
is also done by sending a forged fax to the domain registrar, impersonating you
(the registrant)? Other attacks are more subtle: the email that tells you your
domain name is about to expire, and that you need to renew. Are you sure that
email is actually from your registrar? That last form of attack is called
domain slamming, after a similar and now illegal practice formerly engaged
in by certain phone companies, which switched user’s long distance phone
companies without their knowledge or consent.
- Domains can also
be hijacked when registrars don’t follow all the procedures. The gaining registrar
(to whom the domain is transferred) is supposed to get the approval of the domain
name registrant or administrative contact before going forward with the transfer.
Likewise, the losing registrar (from whom the domain is being transferred) is
supposed to notify the registrant of the transfer during the five-day grace period
before the transfer is completed. Either way, that’s YOU if it’s your business.
You can deny approval of the transfer, but only if you know about it.
Protection
from Domain Hijacking
All it takes is one easy step to protect yourself
from potentially losing your domain name in this manner. You can place a
‘lock’ on your domain name. Your domain name registrar should allow
you to lock your domain name either by phone, fax, email, or online domain manager
using your login and password. Your domain registrar will let you know which
method they require. Once a lock is placed on your domain name, a transfer
of registrar cannot be completed unless the lock is removed by you.
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