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Domain Discussion
Domain Name News
Was there a Hack/Data Breach at Epik?
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<blockquote data-quote="DomainsGENERAL.com" data-source="post: 2349853" data-attributes="member: 322978425"><p>Yes and no. There is already what you say. Usually, this does have some value, even if far from bulletproof (some people do lie, indeed). Then there is the IP logged from, all the details about the browser/system used, the details about the account which received the domain, etc. Chances are not just your names have been stolen in such a situation, but it also happened to other people (which tends to confirm what you say). If several domains declared stolen ended in the same receiving account, this also helps. If it happened with credentials identical to those just leaked from a hack, this tends to confirm your story too. Etc.</p><p></p><p>You report the thing. Then, it's some other people's job to confirm what you say seems correct. There will be questions asked to the account having received the domains. Depends of the answer too (if he has a receipt for a payment to you, for example). A victim doesn't have to absolutely "prove" they're a victim. You already report it, and then, things get sorted out.</p><p></p><p>Sure, you could have "stolen" your own domain from yourself. Or given/sold it and argue it was stolen. But there will be cracks in your story. And well, reporting false crimes is also illegal if I'm not mistaken.... Why the hell would you falsely report something stolen? Unless you're a little nuts or you have an incentive, there is no good reason.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="DomainsGENERAL.com, post: 2349853, member: 322978425"] Yes and no. There is already what you say. Usually, this does have some value, even if far from bulletproof (some people do lie, indeed). Then there is the IP logged from, all the details about the browser/system used, the details about the account which received the domain, etc. Chances are not just your names have been stolen in such a situation, but it also happened to other people (which tends to confirm what you say). If several domains declared stolen ended in the same receiving account, this also helps. If it happened with credentials identical to those just leaked from a hack, this tends to confirm your story too. Etc. You report the thing. Then, it's some other people's job to confirm what you say seems correct. There will be questions asked to the account having received the domains. Depends of the answer too (if he has a receipt for a payment to you, for example). A victim doesn't have to absolutely "prove" they're a victim. You already report it, and then, things get sorted out. Sure, you could have "stolen" your own domain from yourself. Or given/sold it and argue it was stolen. But there will be cracks in your story. And well, reporting false crimes is also illegal if I'm not mistaken.... Why the hell would you falsely report something stolen? Unless you're a little nuts or you have an incentive, there is no good reason. [/QUOTE]
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Was there a Hack/Data Breach at Epik?
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