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Indian government websites are still redirecting users to scam sites

s92oQeSxPt by s92oQeSxPt
January 8, 2025
in Tech
0
Indian government websites are still redirecting users to scam sites

Some Indian government websites continue to allow the planting of scammy links on their official domains — months after TechCrunch reported the issue last year.

TechCrunch found more than 90 “gov.in” website links associated with Indian government departments, including the Indian Council of Agricultural Research and India Post, as well as state governments and councils of Haryana and Maharashtra and others, were redirecting to sites linked to online betting and investment scams. Search engines like Google have indexed the scam links hosted on government sites, increasing the risk of regular internet users finding them.

a screenshot showing several search engine results containing links — hosted on Indian government domains — to scammy websites about shady investments and online betting.
Several search results showing compromised Indian government websites hosting scam sites.

In May, TechCrunch reported that around four dozen Indian government website links were redirecting to online betting platforms. India’s cyber agency, the Computer Emergency Response Team, known as CERT-In, escalated the matter at the time. However, it remained unclear whether the government had fixed the underlying flaw that the scammers were exploiting to plant their links.

Deedy Das of Menlo Ventures, among others, posted on social media platform X this week about the issue resurfacing, indicating that the hacked pages are widespread.

Security researcher Bob Diachenko told TechCrunch that the issue may have resurfaced due to a compromise in the websites’ content management system (CMS) or server configurations.

“If only the symptoms (e.g., malicious content) are removed without addressing the root cause (e.g., vulnerability or backdoor), attackers can reintroduce the issue,” Diachenko said, adding, “It is not a very challenging exercise but requires some downtime and efforts.”

Earlier this week, TechCrunch contacted CERT-In with a few affected links. The agency did not respond to the email, though the links started showing a “page not found” error at around the time of publication.

techcrunch

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