Hijack A Domain For 200$

Lately a name I was monitoring was transfered from Network solutions to another registrar. I’m quite sure the owner did not initiate the action as the email address was on Yahoo and was not active, nor accessible. This isn’t the first time of course we were watching hijackings but the interesting part, it may be the thieves are not doing the work themselves, but for a mere 200$ hire professionals to “recover their lost passwords” and take it from there.

From HireHacker.net:

Hirehacker will find any EMAIL ACCOUNT password for you. The list includes Yahoo, Hotmail, MSN, AOL, Gmail, Rediffmail, Lycos, AIM, Tiscali , Libero, Mac, Netscape and over 600 more domains. They also retrieve password for ALL company mail accounts and university mailboxes.

Just go to www.hirehacker.net and submit your request. Follow a simple procedure and you are done.

Some of the important features of Hirehacker are:-

1- Fastest and most reliable cracking service.
2- Totally stealth and secure.
3- Provides the same current password being used by the victim. They DO NOT change the password.
4- Payment is done ONLY AFTER they provide you with a screenshot of the inbox , or any other suitable proof of your choice.
5- Multiple payment options…over 10 methods to pay from…all online.

Password is sent instantly. They have a great support system as well, catering to everyone’s query.

THE FEES IS $ 200 USD .

I would highly recommend to have your domain either on your own registrar or with one of the top registrars for professional domainers such as Moniker.com or Fabulous.com, and ask them for personal attention for any sort of transfer away of your domains from their registrars.
If domains are your business, if your domains are valuable to you, don’t overlook the very basics - their safety.

10 Responses to “Hijack A Domain For 200$”


  1. 1 DomainerPro

    Ok, that’s scary. My domains are scattered across two dozen registrars because I bought many of them at Snapnames auctions. I’ve been meaning to work on consolidating them, but haven’t gotten around to it. This definitely gives me some impetus to consolidate them all at Moniker.

  2. 2 Sam

    I am sure this is just a scam website. I have sent an email to gmail team about this issue, and asked if they can prevent this from happening. Lets hear their reply.

    Sam

  3. 3 Steve Smith

    not too cool to promote this

  4. 4 Cybertonoic

    Consolidation?

    Never put all your eggs in the same basket!

  5. 5 orca

    Hi sahar
    Indirectly, you are promoting this website and this method.

    At least don’t link directly to the site.

    —-ANSWER—-

    in this case the website in question isn’t the problem, it is the criminals who order those passwords and afterward use the information to hijack domains. Reading the TOS on this site it is clear to me they are a retrieval service to those who own their email addresses but lost their passwords, although I’m sure many use and abuse it (just like many use and abuse other services, like Google, Yahoo).

  6. 6 Sam

    Here is what the gmail team has to say about this.

    Hello,

    Thanks for your report.

    To ensure the security of your account, we suggest that you take the following measures:

    1. Change your security question.

    - Choose a question only you know the answer to and that is not associated with your password.
    - Choose a question that cannot be answered through research (for example, your mother’s maiden name, your birth date, your first or last name, your social security number, your phone number, your pet’s name, etc.).
    - Choose an answer that is memorable, but not easy to guess. Your answer should be a complete sentence.

    2. Create a unique password.

    - Be creative. Don’t use words that can be found in a dictionary.
    - Use at least six characters.
    - Don’t use a password that you have used elsewhere.
    - Don’t use keyboard patterns (asdf) or sequential numbers (1234).
    - Create an acronym. Don’t use a common one, like NASA or SCUBA. Don’t make your password solely an acronym, combine it with numbers and punctuation marks.
    - Include punctuation marks. Mix capital and lowercase letters. Include numbers.
    - Include similar looking substitutions, such as the number zero for the letter ‘O’ or $ for the letter ‘S.’
    - Include phonetic replacements, such as ‘Luv 2 Laf’ for ‘Love to Laugh.’
    - Don’t make your password all numbers, uppercase letters or lowercase letters.
    - Find ways of getting random letters and numbers such as opening books, looking at license plates or taking the third letter from the first ten words you see.
    - Don’t use repeating characters (aa11).
    - Don’t use a password that is listed as an example of how to pick a good password.

    Tips for keeping your secret question, answer, and password secure:

    - Never tell anyone this information and don’t write it down.
    - Never send this information by email.
    - Periodically change them.

    To change your secret question or password in Gmail:

    1. Log in to your Gmail account.
    2. Click ‘Settings’ at the top of any Gmail page.
    3. Click ‘Accounts.’
    4. Click ‘Google Account settings.’
    5. Click ‘Change password’ or ‘Change secret question’ under ‘Personal information.’
    6. Complete the form and click ‘Save’ to make your changes.

    Please note that we aren’t able to provide you with information about attempted logins to your account including, but not limited to, the IP address from which the attempted login was made, and the time and date attempted logins occurred.

    Sincerely,

    The Google Team

  7. 7 Jason Lavigne

    You should use a registrar that gives you the option to turn off the forgotten password function on your account. If you truly lose access to your account you should have to contact your account manager and have them validate your identity before they help you access your account.

    You should also have the option to configure the security of your account to do such things as not allowing domains to be unlocked through the online control panel or not allow online auth code requests.

  1. 1 Elliot’s Blog » Blog Archive » Hijacking Domain Names for $200
  2. 2 Black SEO: Hiring a Domain Hijacker for $200 ::
  3. 3 Domisfera » Articulo » Secuestrar un dominio por 200$



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