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Typosquatting is a form of cybersquatting which relies on the chances that a person who enters a website address into a web browser will accidentally enter an incorrect website address and be led to an alternative address which the cybersquatter owns.
Overview
Generally, the victim site of typosquatting will be a frequently visited website.
The typosquatter's URL will usually be one of three kinds, all similar to the victim site address:
- A common misspelling of the intended site; for example, webadress.com
- A misspelling based on typing errors; for example, wwebaddress.com or wwbaddress.com
- A differently phrased domain name; for example, web-address.com
(In all previous examples, the intended website is webaddress.com.)
Once in the typosquatter's site, the user may also be tricked into thinking that they are in fact in the real site; through the use of copied or similar logos, website layouts or content. Sometimes competitors of the victim site will do this.
Alternatively, the user will be forwarded to a site of a completely different nature to what they intended. This tactic is often used by pornographic websites and comedy websites.
Sometimes, the typosquatters will use the false addresses to distribute viruses, adware, spyware or other malware.
Combatting typosquatting
A victim website will usually send a cease and desist letter to the offender at first, in attempt to quell the activity.
They may also try and purchase the website address from the typosquatter, which could have been the typosquatter's aim all along.
Occasionally, lawsuits will be taken against the offending site or individual.
A company may try and pre-combat typosquatting by obtaining a number of websites with common misspellings and redirect them to the main, correctly spelt website. For example www.gooogle.com, www.goolge.com, www.gogle.com, and others, all redirect to www.google.com.
Examples of typosquatting
- A related gambit is obtaining "800" numbers that correspond to misspellings; a good illustration is AT&T's sudden abandonment of "1-800-OPERATOR" and replacing it with "1-800-CALL-ATT". It seems that many Americans don't know how to spell operator, enough that MCI was raking in a lot of business with "1-800-OPERATER", reaping the benefits of AT&T's advertising. (In both numbers, the final "R" is superfluous.)
See also
DNS, top-level domain, URL, cybersquatting, UDRP
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