MySpace Phishing Scam Prompts Website Removal

March 17th, 2007

Over the past few days I’ve had over a million hits from MySpace.com – thousands and thousands of users clicking a link that leads them to a d04.net page. The page explained that the link they’d clicked had been disabled because it had violated our terms and conditions. Straightforward enough, right?

Evidently not for the MySpace crowd! I had hundreds of emails showing a varying level of spelling ability, all asking me why their precious MySpace pages had been blocked. I hadn’t blocked a single person’s MySpace page you understand – just the link to the fake site.

For doing this, I’ve been called a spammer and a hacker. I’ve been told I suck and that people are fed up with my shit. I’ve witnessed a whole gamut of badly-written pleading as people cry about their MySpace, claim they didn’t do anything and won’t ever do anything like it ever again, honest. I’ve even had people send me their login details asking me to fix things – what the hell’s wrong with these people?

So anyway, d04.net is now offline and will remain so until I can be bothered to rewrite it all, making it even more restrictive and even more hassle for me to run – all because some people on the Internet can’t be trusted. And this is why we can’t have nice things.

You’ll understand why I’m in no rush to resurrect it.

UPDATE: (Actually it’s now Sunday, but what the heck)

It appears some of the MySpace users who can’t read a URL have reported d04.net to McAfee Site Advisor which redirects you to a page reading:

    “d04.net/ may try to steal your information.
    Why were you redirected to this page? We believe this site may be
    trying to trick you into entering your financial or personal
    information. This is a serious security threat which could lead to
    identity theft, financial losses or other dissemination of personal
    information. “

I’ve emailed them with an explanation and hopefully they’ll have a real live human with a working brain look at the situation and … ah who am I kidding?

MySpace is the new SlashDot

August 16th, 2006

Well maybe not quite but it’s certainly getting there.

You may recall I mentioned someone creating a Fake MySpace Login using d04.net the otherday, and that I pulled it just as soon as I spotted the phishing attempt.

Well it turns out I wasn’t quite quick enough, and on the 9th August I had 65,000 hits on that domain alone. I wondered why I’d experienced a bump in AdSense earnings, and it turns out 358 people had clicked on ads that were displayed as part of d04’s function. I don’t know whether I should be pleased about that or not.

A quick shufty through the server logs revealed the spike, and Google AdSense registered 105,000 page impressions over three days. Thankfully this is the new server and it didn’t even flinch – I’m not sure how the old one would have coped.

Latest Phishing Scam – Fake MySpace Login

August 11th, 2006

The Internet is full of very sad people. As if it wasn’t bad enough with phishing attempts to get bank account, PayPal or eBay details these people now have a new target – MySpace.

Over the last couple of days, pedwa2305@yahoo.com has tried to create fake MySpace login pages and used a Free Subdomain to try and fool users into giving up their details.

The login page itself is amateurish and unconvincing and has an advertising banner across the top of the page, but at least one person has emailed me (despite the domain being blocked, so all they see are d04-branded pages) asking to cancel her MySpace account.

Why MySpace? Is this a feeble attempt to hack a certain someone’s account or is it part of a much wider phishing attempt? I don’t care – the subdomains have been blocked and the account disabled. If anyone else creates one, the same will occur.