Goodbye Google Domains!! ?? !!

…hello Namecheap ddns or, hmm, domain hosting too?

This domain, boba.org, is on a server I control, behind a dynamic IP address. Google Domains provides the domain hosting and supports DDNS which made it easy to have Google nameservers be authoritative, keep the A record updated, and manage the physical server.

Now Google’s giving up the domain name business, along with all the convenient features they bundle like DDNS, redirects, privacy, etc.

It’s being transferred to Squarespace. And Squarespace doesn’t include DDNS or offer it as a bundle.

Still need a way to update domain record with new address when it changes BUT can’t do that with Squarespace nameservers.

Checking if domain record can have nameserver but no A record with IP. IF SO, domain record points to nameserver that can be updated, e.g. Namecheap free DNS, and domain continues to function when IP changes even though new domain host doesn’t offer dynamic IP updating.

Will see what happens and update…

Anatomy of a Stealthy Phish

Targeting me or just a step up in the scammer’s tool quality?

Got an email from AUROBINDO PHARMA LIMITED asking to schedule an interview with me. Great!! I’m looking for work.

The email is from a GMail account though. So I ask to be contacted from the business email account.

Surprise, I get a follow up email that appears to be from Aurobindo Pharma Limited. Notice though I’m being solicited based on my resume but the “jobs” cover a wide range of positions.

And WHOIS, which can look up information about domain names, never heard of aurobindopharmaltd.com.

$ whois aurobindopharmaltd.com
No match for domain "AUROBINDOPHARMALTD.COM".
>>> Last update of whois database: 2021-12-22T08:15:49Z <<<

And there is no aurobindopharmaltd.com website as of this writing.

I’ve already found that the domain doesn’t exist. Getting email from that domain is therefore not possible. What’s going on? Time to examine the email header. This is what I found…

Guess what? The Return-Path/smtp.mailfrom domain is real. It is an actual business site related to sports. There’s some contact information on it and absolutely nothing to do with pharma.

As I understand it, Return-Path and smtp.mailfrom are the actual source of the email. The email originated from that domain. And that means the domain has been compromised. So I sent email to a site contact advising them what I’ve found and included the email header of the original phishing message.

What I wonder about though is the phisher’s follow up. Whoever was sending those messages seemed to want to convince me they were legitimate. Was it ME they were trying to convince? Or did they just have a better phishing tool and bots on compromised servers that enabled easily sending a message with a forged sender from a compromised server so the message isn’t from a GMail account?

I don’t know. This is the first time this ever happened to me. Actual attention to my initial response, replying and changing the message properties to be a more persuasive fake. Am I being spear phished? Don’t know, but what happened is intriguing.

Attractive deal? Check how long that website’s been around.

Was that vendor set up yesterday to try and take money from you today?

One thing that happens as advertisers get their algorithms into you is much more targeted advertising. Often times with a web link.

Ever wonder how long that website’s been around? Setting up shop, scamming money, and disappearing are tactics that have been around since scams. Long before the Internet. Checking how long a domain name has been around can help detect a scam.

One thing I do when I check advertising is check how old the domain name is. The domain name is the .com, .org, .gov, .net, etc., plus the word before it starting from the preceding / or ., whichever is closest before the .com. Examples like www.disney.com breakdown to domain name disney.com.

How old is the domain name disney.com?

The whois command reveals that information and more with 156 lines of output. The dates are among the first lines and are scrolled off the top of the screen. So scroll up to them to see them.

Substitute a function, called by the same name, that uses whois and grep to produce less output, and focused on dates and attributes like URLs. The substitute command returns 23 lines. These are the lines.

$ whois disney.com
   Updated Date: 2021-01-21T15:04:59Z
   Creation Date: 1990-03-21T05:00:00Z
   Registry Expiry Date: 2023-03-22T04:00:00Z
NOTICE: The expiration date displayed in this record is the date the
currently set to expire. This date does not necessarily reflect the expiration
date of the domain name registrant's agreement with the sponsoring
view the registrar's reported date of expiration for this registration.
Updated Date: 2021-01-15T16:22:12Z
Creation Date: 1990-03-21T00:00:00Z
Registrar Registration Expiration Date: 2023-03-22T04:00:00Z
Registry Registrant ID: 
Registrant Name: Disney Enterprises, Inc.; Domain Administrator
Registrant Organization: Disney Enterprises, Inc.
Registrant Street: 500 South Buena Vista Street, Mail Code 8029
Registrant City: Burbank
Registrant State/Province: CA
Registrant Postal Code: 91521-8029
Registrant Country: US
Registrant Phone: +1.8182384694
Registrant Phone Ext: 
Registrant Fax: +1.8182384694
Registrant Fax Ext: 
Registrant Email: Corp.DNS.Domains@disney.com

Easier to see only the dates and some other relevant info by customizing my own whois. I am sure it can be improved on, but for the time being this listing is the substitute whois in my .bash_aliases.

function whois {

        if [ $# -ne 1 ]; then
                printf "Usage: whois <domain.tld>\nTo use native whois precede command with \\ \n "
                return 1
        fi

# implemented code calls installation whois by full path 
        /usr/bin/whois $1 | grep -wi "date\|registrant\|contact 
domain\|holder"
## haven't tried outside Ubuntu
## a possibility to make this somewhat portable
## $(which whois) $1 | grep -wi "date\|registrant\|contact 
domain\|holder"
}

Now, for an advertisement that’s been showing up in my Facebook feed lately, there’s listncnew.com. Sells NEW laptops and Macbooks for $75 – $95!! I figured it must be scam but, for that price, worth the risk because could cancel the credit card transaction. Before I made the order I ran the domain name through my substitute whois to see when the domain was registered. It was created October, 2021, very new. I didn’t expect to get my order and didn’t. At least I wasn’t out the money and now have a way to look at whois data that limits the output to show only information relevant to me.

whois listncnew.com
   Updated Date: 2021-10-26T09:14:16Z
   Creation Date: 2021-10-26T09:10:35Z
   Registry Expiry Date: 2022-10-26T09:10:35Z
NOTICE: The expiration date displayed in this record is the date the
currently set to expire. This date does not necessarily reflect the expiration
date of the domain name registrant's agreement with the sponsoring
view the registrar's reported date of expiration for this registration.
 Updated Date: 2021-10-26T09:13:25Z 
 Creation Date: 2021-10-26T09:10:35Z 
 Registrar Registration Expiration Date: 2022-10-26T09:10:35Z 
 Registry Registrant ID: 5372808-ER 
 Registrant Name: Privacy Protection 
 Registrant Organization: Privacy Protection 
 Registrant Street: 2229 S Michigan Ave Suite 411 
 Registrant City: Chicago 
 Registrant State/Province: Illinois 
 Registrant Country: United States 
 Registrant Postal Code: 60616 
 Registrant Email: Select Contact Domain Holder link 
 Admin Email: Select Contact Domain Holder link 
 Tech Email: Select Contact Domain Holder link 
 Billing Email: Select Contact Domain Holder link


This is my first post in a while. Haven’t been routine releasing posts this year. There’s another five that have been hovering in edit for a while. Maybe I can get them out before the end of this year.