PANews reported on October 14 that according to The Block, the crypto crime investigation unit "Security Alliance" (SEAL) has announced a new way to report potential phishing websites that use increasingly sophisticated means to hide hacker traces. SEAL said that traditional automatic scanning of URLs will encounter common problems with web crawlers, such as verification codes and anti-robot protection, and scammers have "disguise" functions that provide harmless content to suspected scanners, so a way to see what users see is needed. Its new "verifiable phishing reporter" uses a new encryption scheme called "TLS proof" to allow white hat hackers to check the website as seen by potential victims. SEAL pointed out that transport layer security itself does not support the generation of session records, leaving opportunities for third parties to misreport content. Users can submit proof through the program, and SEAL will verify and ensure that the content is properly signed and contains evidence of malicious activity. After about a month of private testing, this feature is now open to the public.PANews reported on October 14 that according to The Block, the crypto crime investigation unit "Security Alliance" (SEAL) has announced a new way to report potential phishing websites that use increasingly sophisticated means to hide hacker traces. SEAL said that traditional automatic scanning of URLs will encounter common problems with web crawlers, such as verification codes and anti-robot protection, and scammers have "disguise" functions that provide harmless content to suspected scanners, so a way to see what users see is needed. Its new "verifiable phishing reporter" uses a new encryption scheme called "TLS proof" to allow white hat hackers to check the website as seen by potential victims. SEAL pointed out that transport layer security itself does not support the generation of session records, leaving opportunities for third parties to misreport content. Users can submit proof through the program, and SEAL will verify and ensure that the content is properly signed and contains evidence of malicious activity. After about a month of private testing, this feature is now open to the public.

The Security Alliance, a crypto crime research group, has launched a new way to report potential phishing sites.

2025/10/14 08:57

PANews reported on October 14 that according to The Block, the crypto crime investigation unit "Security Alliance" (SEAL) has announced a new way to report potential phishing websites that use increasingly sophisticated means to hide hacker traces. SEAL said that traditional automatic scanning of URLs will encounter common problems with web crawlers, such as verification codes and anti-robot protection, and scammers have "disguise" functions that provide harmless content to suspected scanners, so a way to see what users see is needed. Its new "verifiable phishing reporter" uses a new encryption scheme called "TLS proof" to allow white hat hackers to check the website as seen by potential victims. SEAL pointed out that transport layer security itself does not support the generation of session records, leaving opportunities for third parties to misreport content. Users can submit proof through the program, and SEAL will verify and ensure that the content is properly signed and contains evidence of malicious activity. After about a month of private testing, this feature is now open to the public.

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