02 Sep Anti-Phishing
What is phishing? Phishing is the fraudulent attempt to obtain sensitive information like usernames, passwords and credit card details, by pretending to be a trustworthy entity in an electronic communication. Obviously we want all our personal and security information to be safe so Google is set to try something new. They plan to hide much of a site’s URL in order to make it harder for phishing attacks to succeed. This change should come about in October – rolling out to some users in Chrome 86.
Gregg Keizer explains further in his article on Computer World (please follow the link to the original article)
“Google will run a trial with Chrome 86, the browser set to release in October, that will hide much of a site’s URL as a way to foil phishing attacks.
“We’re … going to experiment with how URLs are shown in the address bar on desktop platforms,” Emily Stark, Eric Mill and Shweta Panditrao, all members of Chrome’s security team, wrote in an Aug. 12 post to a company blog. “Our goal is to understand — through real-world usage — whether showing URLs this way helps users realize they’re visiting a malicious website, and protects them from phishing and social engineering attacks.”
The test will roll out in Chrome 86 – currently slated to ship Oct. 6 – with participants chosen randomly. Stark, Mill and Panditrao did not specify the number of Chrome users, or even a percentage of the browser’s total, who will see the address bar pilot. Enterprise-enrolled devices won’t be included in this Chrome 86 experiment, they added.
Rather than display the entire URL in Chrome’s address bar, the trial will instead condense it to what Google called the “registrable domain,” which it explained means (the “most significant” part of the domain name). If the full URL for, say, a Computerworld article is https://www.computerworld.com/article/3571442/microsoft-sets-new-support-deadlines-for-ie11-and-edge.html, then the registrable domain would be computerworld.com.
Showing only the domain, the three Google engineers argued, might make it easier for users – those who look at the address bar, anyway (not everyone does) – to ensure they were at the right place, not at a malicious site they’d been tricked into visiting. “There are myriad ways that attackers can manipulate URLs to confuse users about a website’s identity,” Stark, Mill and Panditrao said. “(That) leads to rampant phishing, social engineering and scams.”
(The trio cited a 2020 research paper – “Measuring Identity Confusion with Uniform Resource Locators” – to make their case. Of the nine who wrote the paper, two were from Google; the remaining were from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.)
To view the complete URL, the user simply moves the pointer atop the address bar and let it hover for a moment. At that time, Chrome reconstitutes the URL to its full form. Another way: Chrome will sport a new item in the right-click menu – “Always show full URLs” – that will set the address bar to show the whole URL for all sites.
Although Chrome 86 won’t be available in the final ready-for-release form – Google calls that Stable – for months, users can put the test to, well, the test now. Using either the Canary or Dev builds (now at Chrome 86), users can enter chrome://flags in the address bar, then set these two items to Enabled and relaunch the browser:
#omnibox-ui-reveal-steady-state-url-path-query-and-ref-on-hover
#omnibox-ui-sometimes-elide-to-registrable-domain
(In Computerworld’s test, the macOS version of Chrome 86 Dev did not display the “Always show full URLs” item in the right-click menu.)
This won’t be the first time that Google has monkeyed with the way the URL appears in Chrome’s address bar. Two years ago, for instance, Google dropped the www and m prefixes, but after pushback, reversed course on the former.”
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