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Joined 1Y ago
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Cake day: Jun 12, 2023

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Yeah, this probably has to do with the cache. You can try opening dev tools (F12 in most browsers), go to the network tab, and browse to pathfinder.social. You should see all requests going out, including “fake requests” to content that you already have locally cached


That’s really really weird, I cannot resolve the domain to an IP, even after trying a bunch of different DNS servers. If you’re on linux, can you run nslookup pathfinder.social and paste the output here ?


The fact that it has not been bought as soon as the domain expired makes me believe this instance went down before the trend started


These services usually use either or both of passive DNS replication (running public recursive DNS resolvers and logging lookup that returns a record) and certificate transparency logs (where certificate authorities publish the domain names for which they issue certificates). A lot of my subdomains are missing from these services



Lots of dead Lemmy/Kbin domains have CNAME records pointing to the same domain parking company
publication croisée depuis : https://lemmy.pierre-couy.fr/post/584644 > While monitoring my Pi-Hole logs today, I noticed a bunch of queries for `XXXXXX.bodis.com`, where XXXXXX are numbers. I saw a few variations for the numbers, each one being queried several times. > > Digging further, I found out these queries were caused by CNAME records on domains that look like they used to point to Lemmy/Kbin instances. > > From what I understand, domain owners can register a CNAME record to `XXXXXX.bodis.com` and earn some money from the traffic it receives. I guess that each number variation is a domain owner ID in Bodis' database. I saw between 5 to 10 different number variations, each one being pointed to by a bunch of old Lemmy domains. > > This probably means that among actors who snatch expired domains, several of them have taken a specific interest with expired domains of old Lemmy instances. Another hypothesis is that there were a lot of domains registered for hosting Lemmy during the Reddit API debacle (about 1 year ago), which started expiring recently. > > Are there any other instance admins who noticed the same thing ? Is any of my two hypothesis more plausible than the other ? Should we worry about this trend ? > > Anyway, I hope this at least serves as a reminder to not let our domains expire ;)
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