10 Aug
Posted by Marc as Domain hijacking, Networking, Programming
Mistyped URLS or defunct domains are now being redirected by Bell Canada to an ad-rich search page. This new “service” is in fact DNS hijacking and a cheap cash grab by Canada’s ISP. Similar programs have been enacted by other ISPs in the United-States such as Comcast.
Bell’s service, DomainNotFound.ca, does offer an opt-out service by using a cookie: Note: In order for opt-out to work properly, you need to accept a “cookie” indicating that you have opted out of this service. If you use a program that removes cookies, you will have to repeat this opt-out process when the cookie is deleted. The cookie placed on your computer will contain the site name: “www.domainnotfound.ca”.
This practice is not only surprising, it is an invasive service that has only one purpose: to raise advertising dollars for Bell.ca. Disappointing to say the least.
What We Tell The World
- About this server
- The hostname: websiteforensics.com
- This server address: 209.237.150.20
What You Tell The World
- Your IP address: 107.21.156.140
- Your hostname: ec2-107-21-156-140.compute-1.amazonaws.com
- Your country domain: .com
- You came from:
- Requested URL: /code/is-bell-canada-now-hijacking-dns/
- Browser INFO: CCBot/2.0
August 12th, 2009 at 7:03 am
Interesting and informative. But will you write about this once more?
August 18th, 2009 at 4:25 pm
Cheap cheap cheap, anything for a buck, but they’re not alone.