Cybercriminals
use domain squatting techniques for abusive activities like phishing, malware
distribution, or hosting fraudulent content, which can result in significant
reputational damage for the brand and monetary losses for its customers. NordStellar introduces its new AI-driven cybersquatting detection feature to
safeguard enterprises by identifying and notifying businesses about
cybersquatting incidents, providing actionable insights to help stop
cybercriminals in their tracks.
"NordStellar's
cybersquatting feature automatically detects old and newly registered domains
that closely resemble other brands. We take it a step further with an
AI-powered solution that analyzes intent, assesses risk levels, and recommends
next steps - reducing response time and helping prevent attacks before they
escalate," says Vakaris Noreika, head of product at NordStellar.
Domain
squatting, also known as cybersquatting, involves registering, trafficking, or
using a domain name to profit from a trademark belonging to someone else. Over
the past year, companies like DeepSeek and Temu were heavily targeted by
cybersquatting. However, they're not alone - the World Intellectual Property
Organization (WIPO) named 2024 the second busiest year since 1999 regarding
domain name disputes, registering 6,168 cases. According to WIPO, cybersquatting is one of
the leading reasons for the growing number of cases.
Cybercriminals
use various domain manipulation techniques to register domain names similar to
the original ones. Some of the most popular methods include typosquatting,
which exploits common misspellings (such as nordstelar.com instead of
nordstellar.com), addition, which adds characters to a legitimate domain name
(like nordstellarr.com), and replacement, which replaces characters (like
nordsterall.com). Besides the 16 different domain name manipulation techniques
that NordStellars' cybersquatting detection feature tracks, hackers also
exploit expired domains, hijacking and repurposing them for malicious
activities.
NordStellar's
cybersquatting protection feature stands out by providing its clients with
comprehensive monitoring that checks newly registered domains and tracks the
expiration dates and changes to existing domains. The feature is equipped with
advanced algorithms for accurate identification beyond basic string comparison.
"Enabling
proactive monitoring and mitigating domain-based threats improves businesses'
security posture as well as reduces the risk of their customers falling victim
to phishing attacks or malware infections," says Noreika. "Additionally, the
new cybersquatting feature seamlessly integrates with other existing security
information and event management (SIEM) and security workflows, enhancing the
efficiency of analysis and response."
How it
works:
- Continuously monitors for domain registrations and changes.
- Analyzes detected risks and assesses their severity using similarity algorithms, threat intelligence feeds,
and information from the internet record listing WHOIS to determine risk.
- Implements AI-powered analysis to examine detected threats further, providing detailed
information, including specific threat types, confidence and severity
levels, supporting evidence, and recommended remediation actions -
investigating the domain further, initiating a takedown request with the
registrar, or blocking the domain at the network level.
- Provides real-time alerts and notifications via email, Slack, and in-platform notifications based
on configurable criteria, such as event type and risk level.
- Offers detailed investigation of each suspicious domain, including screenshots,
redirect chains, WHOIS information, and similarity metrics.
- Allows security teams to resolve and track the status
of the identified threats.
The cybersquatting feature is now available to
all NordStellar users.