A sophisticated phishing campaign is currently leveraging a subtle typographical trick to bypass user vigilance, deceiving victims into handing over sensitive login credentials. Attackers utilize the domain “rnicrosoft.com” to impersonate the tech giant.
By replacing the letter ‘m’ with the combination of ‘r’ and ‘n’, fraudsters create a visual doppleganger that is nearly indistinguishable from the legitimate domain at a casual glance.
This technique, known as typosquatting, relies heavily on the font rendering used in modern email clients and web browsers.



I’m kinda surprised Microsoft hasn’t bought that domain long time ago… That trick is like decades old
@GROK WHAT IS KERNING???
You would think it would be an easy up-sell by the domain registrars to offer sound and look a like domains when you registering and renewing your domain
On the one hand, it can help mitigate phishing attacks that could cost millions. On the other hand, rnicrosoft would have to spend 20 pounds in something not AI related.
Surely you can see why it’s not an easy solution.
Devils advocate: it’s not their responsibly to prevent third parties impersonating them. But it would be pretty damm nice if they did.
That would assume they care about their users