Porn Sites Hijack Expired Domain Names
Forget to renew? Your site might find a new role--and those who link to it
may not be pleased.

http://www.pcworld.com/article/87824-1/article.html
Carolyn Duffy Marsan, Network World
Friday, March 08, 2002 09:00 AM PST

The number of domain names being allowed to expire--intentionally or
accidentally--is at an all-time high. Now shady middlemen called traffic
aggregators are increasingly buying these names and redirecting
corresponding Web traffic to other sites, primarily porn and gambling
venues.

Organizations as varied as the Boston Philharmonic Orchestra and the Dutch
government have seen their expired domain names snapped up by traffic
aggregators and redirected to porn sites. Others, including the United
Nations and the U.S. Department of Education, have received irate e-mails
from online customers complaining about undetected links to porn sites.

"The links caused a hell of a stir," says Edward Loeb, a program manager
with Allied Technology Group, a contractor that operates the U.S. Department
of Education's Web site. "The public is not at all happy to find...their
taxpayers' dollars spent on Web sites that link to pornography. It was quite
an embarrassment to us."

Tracking Tools Help
Using an early version of a new tool called LinkScan 9.0, Loeb found 15
links to porn sites buried among the 65,000 internal and external links on
the Department of Education's Web site.

The links were to two domains that had changed ownership from educational
outfits to traffic aggregators.

Marketers of link-checking software such as LinkScan are updating their
offerings with the capability to check links for adult content.

"We just started seeing this trend in the last three months," says Michael
Weider, chair of Watchfire, which sells a Web site quality-assessment tool
called WebXM that identifies unintentional links to adult content. He says
some companies have as many as 200 of these potentially embarrassing URLs
buried within their content.

The problem has gotten serious enough that the Internet Corporation for
Assigned Names and Numbers recently issued a proposal to create a 30-day
waiting period before expiring domain names can be resold. ICANN's policy
paper says that in recent months it has seen "a rising tide" of complaints
related to domain names inadvertently changing ownership.

Embarrassing Slip
The situation can prove embarrassing for companies.

Consider what happened to The Special Interest Group on CD/DVD Applications
and Technology, a 15-year-old nonprofit organization. The group, which held
its last conference in 1999, accidentally let its domain
name--www.sigcat.org--expire.

In December, Domains For Sale, an Estonian traffic aggregator with an
Illinois telephone number, purchased SIGCAT's domain name and now redirects
traffic to a porn operator named Adult City.

"We found out about a month ago that the site looked a lot different than it
used to," says Jerry McFaul, a U.S. Geological Survey employee and founder
of SIGCAT. Renewing the domain name "fell through the cracks. We had a
Webmaster in one state, an ISP in another state, and we were here in
Virginia. Each of us thought the other was covering the renewal."

McFaul says he contacted Domains For Sale and was told he could buy back the
domain name but "not to bid anything under $1000." Because the group is
nonprofit, he decided not to spend the money. Instead, SIGCAT is evolving
into a new organization, the DVD Association, with a new Web site:
www.dvda.org.

Domains For Sale did not respond to phone calls for this story.

The SIGCAT snafu also tripped up Amtower & Company, an Ashton, Maryland
provider of direct-marketing services to the federal government. Amtower had
links to www.sigcat.org on some of its business-to-government Web sites.

Company President Mark Amtower says he had "not a clue" that he was linking
to a porn site.

"I own about 300 different [business-to-government] URLs," he says. "I damn
well don't want one of them linked to porno."

Big (if Shady) Business
SIGCAT isn't the only organization to have its expired domain name purchased
by Domains for Sale or its sister companies, which include Triple Zero
Networks and The Hostmaster. These companies all have addresses in the
former Soviet Union and the same telephone number in Illinois.

They have purchased many formerly reputable domain names, including
can2k.com, which Industry Canada originally used to explain the millennium
bug; wsodc.org, which was used by the Washington Symphony Orchestra; and
climatechange2000.org, which the Dutch government used to publicize a
meeting of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change in
2000.

The number of expired domain names rose from 750,000 per month in August
2001 to more than 2,250,000 per month in December 2001, according to
SnapNames.

Traffic aggregators like Domains for Sale purchase dozens of expiring domain
names with active traffic each month and redirect them to gambling or porn
sites, which in turn pay the traffic aggregators for each customer that
originates from the redirected URL. Typically domain names are sold for $35
a year.

The identification and purchase of expired domain names has gotten easier in
the last year, thanks to the availability of automated services that track
and purchase expiring names. These services, from companies such as
SnapNames, Dotster, and Enom, are increasingly used by traffic aggregators.
Other companies, such as Exody.com, LocalWhois.com,

Gregory S. Williams
[EMAIL PROTECTED]



Reply with a "Thank you" if you liked this post.
_____________________________

MEDIANEWS mailing list
[email protected]
To unsubscribe send an email to:
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

Reply via email to