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287 points govideo | 1 comments | | HN request time: 0.403s | source

I have a domain that is not live. As expected, loading the domain returns: Error 1016.

However...I have a subdomain with a not obvious name, like: userfileupload.sampledomain.com

This subdomain IS LIVE but has NOT been publicized/posted anywhere. It's a custom URL for authenticated users to upload media with presigned url to my Cloudflare r2 bucket.

I am using CloudFlare for my DNS.

How did the internet find my subdomain? Some sample user agents are: "Expanse, a Palo Alto Networks company, searches across the global IPv4 space multiple times per day to identify customers' presences on the Internet. If you would like to be excluded from our scans, please send IP addresses/domains to: scaninfo@paloaltonetworks.com", "Mozilla/5.0 (Macintosh; U; Intel Mac OS X 10_7; en-us) AppleWebKit/534.20.8 (KHTML, like Gecko) Version/5.1 Safari/534.20.8", "Mozilla/5.0 (Linux; Android 9; Redmi Note 5 Pro) AppleWebKit/537.36 (KHTML, like Gecko) Chrome/76.0.3809.89 Mobile Safari/537.36",

The bots are GET requests which are failing, as designed, but I'm wondering how the bots even knew the subdomain existed?!

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BLKNSLVR ◴[] No.43288985[source]
There are a number of companies, not just Palo Alto Networks, that perform various different scales of scans of the entire IPv4 space, some of them perform these scans multiple times per day.

I setup a set of scripts to log all "uninvited activity" to a couple of my systems, from which I discovered a whole bunch of these scanner "security" companies. Personally, I treat them all as malicious.

There are also services that track Newly Registered Domains (NRDs).

Tangentially:

NRD lists are useful for DNS block lists since a large number of NRDs are used for short term scam sites.

My little, very amateur, project to block them can be found here: https://github.com/UninvitedActivity/UninvitedActivity

Edited to add: Direct link to the list of scanner IP addresses (although hasn't been updated in 8 months - crikey, I've been busy longer than I thought): https://github.com/UninvitedActivity/UninvitedActivity/blob/...

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mr_mitm ◴[] No.43289105[source]
Getting the domain name from the IP address is not trivial, though. In fact, it should be impossible, if the name really hasn't been published (barring guessing attempts), so OP's question stands.
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venj ◴[] No.43289244[source]
I had this issue with internal domains indexed by Google. The domains where not published anywhere by my company. They were dcanned by leakix.net which apparently scans the whole web for vulnerabilities and publishes web pages containing the domain names associated with each IP address. I guess they read them from the certificates
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1. jhart99 ◴[] No.43289456[source]
There is another source, SNI certs showing up on a server or load balancer during the TLS handshake. When the client tries to connect to a server using SNI without indicating the server, some will reply with a default or give a list of valid server names.