Web spoofing - significado y definición. Qué es Web spoofing
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Qué (quién) es Web spoofing - definición

Web site spoofing; Spoof web site; Spoof website; Microsoft Firefox 2007; WEB Spoofing; WEB spoofing; Site spoofs

Website spoofing         
Website spoofing is the act of creating a website, as a hoax, with the intention of misleading readers that the website has been created by a different person or organization. Normally, the spoof website will adopt the design of the target website, and it sometimes has a similar URL.
Spoofing attack         
  • Potential use of GPS spoofing against a naval vessel
CYBER ATTACK IN WHICH A PERSON OR PROGRAM SUCCESSFULLY MASQUERADES AS ANOTHER BY FALSIFYING DATA
Spoof attack; Spoofing attacks; Spoof attacks; Email forging; GPS spoofing; Gps spoofing; Geolocation spoofing; Masquerade attack; Voice spoofing; Geo-spoofing; GNSS spoofing
In the context of information security, and especially network security, a spoofing attack is a situation in which a person or program successfully identifies as another by falsifying data, to gain an illegitimate advantage.
IP address spoofing         
  • Example scenario of IP address spoofing
CREATING IP PACKETS USING FORGED IP ADDRESSES IN HEADERS
IP spoofing; IP Spoofing; Ip spoof; Internet protocol spoofing; Ip spoofing; Internet protocol address spoofing; Source address spoofing
In computer networking, IP address spoofing or IP spoofing is the creation of Internet Protocol (IP) packets with a false source IP address, for the purpose of impersonating another computing system.

Wikipedia

Website spoofing

Website spoofing is the act of creating a website with the intention of misleading readers that the website has been created by a different person or organization. Normally, the spoof website will adopt the design of the target website, and it sometimes has a similar URL. A more sophisticated attack results in an attacker creating a "shadow copy" of the World Wide Web by having all of the victim's traffic go through the attacker's machine, causing the attacker to obtain the victim's sensitive information.

Another technique is to use a 'cloaked' URL. By using domain forwarding, or inserting control characters, the URL can appear to be genuine while concealing the actual address of the malicious website. Punycode can also be used for this purpose. Punycode-based attacks exploit the similar characters in different writing systems in common fonts. For example, on one large font, the greek letter tau (τ) is similar in appearance to the latin undercase letter t. However, the greek letter tau is represented in punycode as 5xa, while the latin undercase letter is simply represented as t, since it is present on the ASCII system. In 2017, a security researcher managed to register the domain xn--80ak6aa92e.com and have it show on several mainstream browsers as apple.com. While the characters used didn't belong to the latin script, due to the default font on those browsers, the end result was non-latin characters that were indistinguishable from those on the latin script.

The objective may be fraudulent, often associated with phishing or e-mail spoofing, or to criticize or make fun of the person or body whose website the spoofed site purports to represent. Because the purpose is often malicious, "spoof" (an expression whose base meaning is innocent parody) is a poor term for this activity so that more accountable organisations such as government departments and banks tend to avoid it, preferring more explicit descriptors such as "fraudulent" or "phishing".

As an example of the use of this technique to parody an organisation, in November 2006 two spoof websites, www.msfirefox.com and www.msfirefox.net, were produced claiming that Microsoft had bought Firefox and released "Microsoft Firefox 2007."