[UA-discuss] UASG Response to WordFence IDN Phishing concerns

Mark Svancarek marksv at microsoft.com
Mon Apr 24 22:24:38 UTC 2017


Looks good.  Please add a hyperlink to “Cyrillic” to balance the link already on “ASCII”.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cyrillic_script

From: ua-discuss-bounces at icann.org [mailto:ua-discuss-bounces at icann.org] On Behalf Of Don Hollander
Sent: Monday, April 24, 2017 2:41 PM
To: ua-discuss at icann.org
Subject: [UA-discuss] UASG Response to WordFence IDN Phishing concerns

Further to recent discussion on this list, we have drafted a document that we plan on posting as a Blog Post to the UASG Web site that can be referenced by others.

We want to get feedback from the community on this document by Thursday UTC.

So, here it is – pasted below and as a word document in case you want to enable tracking and make amendments.   If you have comments or suggestions, please share them to this group.

Don



IDNs and Phishing: What You Need to Know
By TBD at UASG

Internationalized Domain Names<https://www.icann.org/resources/pages/idn-2012-02-25-en> (IDNs) are growing in popularity, a testament to their role in the expansion of the global Internet and the value they provide in connecting non-English speakers to the Web. However, you may have noticed a renewed focus over the past week of a script mixing technique that phishing scammers could potentially use to trick Internet users into visiting malicious websites. This phishing method takes advantage of the fact that characters from various languages and scripts are sometimes visually similar to each other. For example, the Cyrillic “а” and the ASCII<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ASCII> “a” look virtually identical. This technique is known as a homograph attack.

Homographic phishing efforts associated with IDNs are not new. In fact, they date back to the early 2000s. Registries have since implemented policies that preclude mixing scripts[1] within a domain name label.

While this issue should be taken seriously and serves as an important reminder of consumer safety, various IDN and anti-abuse groups are actively working to mitigate potential threats, and there are already certain browser-set protections in place. In the meantime, Internet users should practice the same basic security hygiene that is always recommended: avoid clicking suspicious links, and use a good password manager that will only enter login credentials on trusted sites.

Equally important is to recognize the benefits of IDNs and avoid disabling them, which could lead to an unpredictable user experience and eventually a decrease in adoption. IDNs are essential in bringing non-English speakers – the majority of the world’s population – online, and allowing those users to create their own highly relevant online identities as well as navigate the Internet in their native languages. In addition to the social and cultural benefits of IDNs, they also represent a significant economic opportunity; a recent report<https://uasg.tech/whitepaper/> commissioned by the Universal Acceptance Steering Group (UASG) found that online spending from new IDN users could start at USD 6.2 billion per year.

The UASG’s mission is to help software developers and website owners keep pace with the evolving Domain Name System (DNS) – and this includes issues around the adoption and acceptance of IDNs. If you’d like to get involved in helping work toward a solution to this and other IDN-related issues, please visit https://uasg.tech/ or get in touch<https://uasg.tech/contact/> to learn more.



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[1] Exceptions are practiced for languages with established orthographies and conventions that require the commingled use of multiple scripts, e.g. the Japanese writing system.
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