Menu

  • Alerts
  • Incidents
  • News
  • APTs
  • Cyber Decoded
  • Cyber Hygiene
  • Cyber Review
  • Cyber Tips
  • Definitions
  • Malware
  • Threat Actors
  • Tutorials

Useful Tools

  • Password generator
  • Report an incident
  • Report to authorities
No Result
View All Result
CTF Hack Havoc
CyberMaterial
  • Education
    • Cyber Decoded
    • Definitions
  • Information
    • Alerts
    • Incidents
    • News
  • Insights
    • Cyber Hygiene
    • Cyber Review
    • Tips
    • Tutorials
  • Support
    • Contact Us
    • Report an incident
  • About
    • About Us
    • Advertise with us
Get Help
Hall of Hacks
  • Education
    • Cyber Decoded
    • Definitions
  • Information
    • Alerts
    • Incidents
    • News
  • Insights
    • Cyber Hygiene
    • Cyber Review
    • Tips
    • Tutorials
  • Support
    • Contact Us
    • Report an incident
  • About
    • About Us
    • Advertise with us
Get Help
No Result
View All Result
Hall of Hacks
CyberMaterial
No Result
View All Result
Home Alerts

Hazy Hawk Hijacks Cloud DNS For Web Scams

May 21, 2025
Reading Time: 3 mins read
in Alerts
Teen Hacker Admits PowerSchool Cyberattack

A threat actor named Hazy Hawk is hijacking abandoned cloud resources of major organizations. These resources include Amazon S3 buckets and also Microsoft Azure cloud computing endpoints. Hazy Hawk cleverly leverages misconfigurations found in Domain Name System (DNS) CNAME records. The hijacked domains are then used to host URLs that direct users to various scams. These malicious URLs also distribute malware via various traffic distribution systems or TDSes. Infoblox first discovered this active threat actor after it gained control of CDC sub-domains. This occurred in February 2025 impacting the U.S. Center for Disease Control. Other victims include global government agencies prominent universities and large international corporations. These widespread attacks have been ongoing since at least December of the year 2023.

Remarkably Hazy Hawk does not use these valuable hijacked domains for typical espionage activities.

Instead these compromised domains feed into the rather seedy underworld of online adtech. Unsuspecting victims are often whisked away to a wide range of online scams. They also encounter many fake applications hosted on these reputable but hijacked domain names. Malicious browser notifications are used to trigger processes that will have lingering negative impact. Hijacking trusted domains boosts credibility in search results for their malicious spammy content. This makes the harmful content appear much more legitimate to the average internet user. Even more concerningly this sophisticated approach enables the threat actors to bypass security detection. The operation relies on seizing abandoned domains that possess dangling DNS CNAME records.

Hazy Hawk actively finds abandoned cloud resources then quickly commandeers them for malicious purposes.

In some specific cases the threat actor also employs URL redirection concealment techniques. These are used to effectively hide which exact cloud resource was actually hijacked. Infoblox named this actor Hazy Hawk due to their method of hijacking cloud resources. It is quite possible the domain hijacking component is provided as a separate service. This service could then be utilized by a larger group of malicious online actors. Hazy Hawk’s attack chains often involve cloning the legitimate content of well-known websites. This cloned content is hosted on their newly hijacked domains to appear trustworthy. Victims are lured with pornographic content or offers for popular pirated software downloads. Site visitors are then funneled via a TDS to determine their next malicious destination.

Hazy Hawk is one of dozens of threat actors tracked within advertising affiliate programs. Actors in these programs drive users into specifically tailored malicious online content streams. They are often incentivized to include requests for users to allow push notifications. The main idea is to then flood a victim’s device with many push notifications. This action delivers an endless torrent of various malicious content to the user. Each separate notification often leads to different scams scareware and also fake online surveys. To prevent Hazy Hawk domain owners should remove DNS CNAME records for shut down resources. End users on the other hand are advised to deny all notification requests from unknown websites. Hazy Hawk’s efforts show these advertising affiliate programs are successful enough to pay well.

Reference:

  • Hazy Hawk Exploits Dangling DNS Records To Hijack Cloud Services For Adtech Scams
Tags: Cyber AlertsCyber Alerts 2025CyberattackCybersecurityMay 2025
ADVERTISEMENT

Related Posts

New Godfather Trojan Hijacks Banking Apps

Winos 4.0 Malware Hits Taiwan Via Tax Phish

June 20, 2025
New Godfather Trojan Hijacks Banking Apps

New Godfather Trojan Hijacks Banking Apps

June 20, 2025
New Godfather Trojan Hijacks Banking Apps

New Amatera Stealer Delivered By ClearFake

June 20, 2025
Fake Invoices Deliver Sorillus RAT In Europe

Fake Minecraft Mods On GitHub Spread Malware

June 19, 2025
Russian Phishing Scam Bypasses Google 2FA

Russian Phishing Scam Bypasses Google 2FA

June 19, 2025
Fake Invoices Deliver Sorillus RAT In Europe

Fake Invoices Deliver Sorillus RAT In Europe

June 19, 2025

Latest Alerts

Winos 4.0 Malware Hits Taiwan Via Tax Phish

New Amatera Stealer Delivered By ClearFake

New Godfather Trojan Hijacks Banking Apps

Fake Minecraft Mods On GitHub Spread Malware

Fake Invoices Deliver Sorillus RAT In Europe

Russian Phishing Scam Bypasses Google 2FA

Subscribe to our newsletter

    Latest Incidents

    Massive Leak Exposes 16 Billion Credentials

    Tonga Health System Down After Ransomware

    Chinese Spies Target Satellite Giant Viasat

    German Dealer Leymann Hacked Closes Stores

    Hacker Mints $27M From Meta Pool Gets 132K

    UBS and Pictet Hit By Vendor Data Breach

    CyberMaterial Logo
    • About Us
    • Contact Us
    • Jobs
    • Legal and Privacy Policy
    • Site Map

    © 2025 | CyberMaterial | All rights reserved

    Welcome Back!

    Login to your account below

    Forgotten Password?

    Retrieve your password

    Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

    Log In

    Add New Playlist

    No Result
    View All Result
    • Alerts
    • Incidents
    • News
    • Cyber Decoded
    • Cyber Hygiene
    • Cyber Review
    • Definitions
    • Malware
    • Cyber Tips
    • Tutorials
    • Advanced Persistent Threats
    • Threat Actors
    • Report an incident
    • Password Generator
    • About Us
    • Contact Us
    • Advertise with us

    Copyright © 2025 CyberMaterial