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The .eu TLD (top-level domain name) for Web sites allows non-ASCII characters in its Web addresses, after it opened up the TLD to addresses written in Cyrillic and Greek letters, the European ...
It may not be obvious at first glance, but "аpple.com" uses the Cyrillic "а" (U+0430) rather than the ASCII "a" (U+0061). This is known as a homograph attack.
It may not be obvious at first glance, but "аpple.com" uses the Cyrillic "а" (U+0430) rather than the ASCII "a" (U+0061). This is known as a homograph attack .
Unfortunately, it’s not standard to allow all those characters in URIs, and some systems only allow standard ASCII ones. The workaround arrived at by web authorities was a system called ...
For example, the Cyrillic "a", which has a Unicode number of U+0430, looks exactly like the ASCII "a", or U+0061. It has been possible to register domain names that use those homograph letters ...
It may not be obvious at first glance, but “аpple.com” uses the Cyrillic “а” (U+0430) rather than the ASCII “a” (U+0061). This is known as a homograph attack.
Well, think again. At least if you are using Chrome or Firefox. Don’t believe us? Well, check out Apple new website then, at . Notice anything? If you are not using an affected browser you ar… ...
A vulnerability has been exposed in Chrome, Firefox, and Opera browsers. In certain scenarios, the affected browsers may incorrectly render Unicode into ASCII characters via Punycode, tricking ...
The .eu TLD (top-level domain name) for Web sites allows non-ASCII characters in its Web addresses, after it opened up the TLD to addresses written in Cyrillic and Greek letters, the European ...
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