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Google Sees Spam, You See Your Site: A Cloaked SEO Spam Attack

Google Sees Spam, You See Your Site: A Cloaked SEO Spam Attack

We recently handled a case where a customer reported strange SEO behavior on their website. Regular visitors saw a normal site. No popups. No redirects. No visible spam.

However, when they checked their site on Google, the search results were flooded with eBay-type-looking websites and β€œSitus Toto” gambling spam.

This is a professional-grade SEO cloaking attack. The malware turns the application into a double agent: it serves your genuine website content to real people but swaps it for a massive list of gambling ads the second a search engine bot crawls the page.

Continue reading Google Sees Spam, You See Your Site: A Cloaked SEO Spam Attack at Sucuri Blog.

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Slot Gacor: The Rise of Online Casino Spam

Slot Gacor: The Rise of Online Casino Spam

Online casino spam has been without a doubt one of the most prevalent types of spam content that we’ve seen on infected websites in recent years. An extremely common method of promoting low-quality or otherwise undesirable websites is for spammers to hack websites and fill them full of backlinks to pump their SEO. Historically this has been most common with pharma spam as well as essay writing services, knockoff designer goods and others. However, in the last period there’s been an unmistakable shift to online casinos.

Continue reading Slot Gacor: The Rise of Online Casino Spam at Sucuri Blog.

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How to Configure SPFv1: Explained for the Masses

Kent Ickler and Derrick Rauch* // Sun Protection Factor Err… wait a second. Sender Policy Framework Ladies and Gentlemen of the class of 1997, Wear Sunscreen…I will dispense my advice, […]

The post How to Configure SPFv1: Explained for the Masses appeared first on Black Hills Information Security, Inc..

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