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Bluesky Has an Extortion Problem (tedium.co) 26

A cybersquatting scheme targeting prominent writers and entrepreneurs has exposed flaws in Bluesky's domain-based verification system, newsletter Tedium reports, citing users.

Bloomberg columnist Conor Sen reported receiving an extortion attempt this week when an anonymous user who had purchased his namesake domain demanded payment to transfer ownership. The episode has unraveled wider revelations of similar attacks targeting at least five other well-known users, including political blogger Matt Yglesias and The Hustle founder Sam Parr.

The platform's moderation team initially banned Parr's legitimate account while leaving the impersonator active, Sen told Tedium. The fake account was only removed after users escalated the issue to senior Bluesky staff.

Bluesky Has an Extortion Problem

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  • exposed flaws in Bluesky's domain-based verification system, newsletter Tedium reports

    Indeed...

    • They take self-deprecation seriously! At the end, the author blurb starts with "Your time was just wasted by Ernie Smith"
  • by MachineShedFred ( 621896 ) on Wednesday December 18, 2024 @12:12PM (#65022531) Journal

    Why would anyone be surprised that DNS-based authentication might suffer from the same problems that DNS has been facing since the 1990s?

    Domain squatting is a thing. It's always been a thing. And it will always be a thing until something is done to actually prevent it.

  • Sounds more like a domain registrar problem than a Bluesky problem. Though in fairness, they are piggybacking their verification process onto a system was designed with brand names/trademarks in mind rather than personal names.

    • by pjt33 ( 739471 ) on Wednesday December 18, 2024 @12:23PM (#65022589)

      Why would anyone expect people to treat their usernames as brands for which they should own the .com? Especially when most people have different usernames on different sites. It's absolutely a Bluesky problem.

      • In the age of the Internet influencer, the person has become the brand. In the past this was limited to celebrities, but the Internet has democratized this to the extent that it's now possible for the average Joe and Jane at home. Some of these people (including some who aren't even legally adults yet) are making hundreds of thousands or even millions of dollars. For any individuals this isn't a problem because they're largely limited to one platform (YouTube, Twitch, Instagram, etc.) and don't have as much

If you teach your children to like computers and to know how to gamble then they'll always be interested in something and won't come to no real harm.

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