The homograph of Microsoft.com recorded by two Israeli students.

. Hacktivism

31.05.02 The homograph of Microsoft.com recorded by two Israeli students.
Starting from the consideration that only 40 percent of Internet users are native English speakers, according to an evaluation conducted in March by Global Reach, are increasingly considering the domains expressed in non-ASCII characters, according to the directives of the Internationalized Domain Name Working Group of the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF). In April, the company that VeriSign regitrato the largest number of domains, claimed to have recorded about a million international names. The possibilities of these practices are very different, mainly because of a concept such as the homography. These two terms are apparently the same, but in fact composed of different characters. A powerful example of homography has been demonstrated by Evgeniy Gabrilovich (pictured) and Alex Gontmakher, two students at the Technion-Israel Institute of Technology, Haifa (Israel), which recorded a homograph of 'microsoft.com', simply by using the ' c 'and' o 'of the Cyrillic characters. The false 'microsoft.com' seems at first glance identical to that of the multinational, amche if it is not. The procedures performed are explained in ' The homograph Attack ', a document written by the two, and published in' Communications of the ACM 'last February.