• @bartolomeo
    link
    73 months ago

    states the LockBit .onion site, now controlled by British officials.

    How does one hijack a .onion site?

    • @catalog3115@lemmy.world
      link
      fedilink
      133 months ago

      You don’t hijack a .onion site. You pwn the server which hosts .onion site. Give you full access to site. You hijack .onion because its very secure

      • @bartolomeo
        link
        33 months ago

        I see. How do you trace a .onion site back to it’s server?

        • @catnip@lemmy.zip
          link
          fedilink
          73 months ago

          By pwning it. You dont have to find it to pwn it. You just have to be able to send data to it, which everyone can do because whats the point of having a server if noone can interact with it. The attacker just interacts with it in a way that manipulates it to execution attacker controlled code. So for a .onion website for example you find a vulnerability in the websites code and exploit it to make the server the website is running on do what you want.

          • @bartolomeo
            link
            23 months ago

            Can you elaborate? Is the server address stored in some open source?

            • /home/pineapplelover
              link
              fedilink
              43 months ago

              Nah nothing like that. I mean that they’re sharing info to friends willy nilly and some cops got wind of it. That’s kinda what happens to some of the dark web guys who get caught. It’s very rarely something very technical it’s just their own idiocy for reusing emails, transferring funds incorrectly making it traceable, Delivering sus packages all at once to usps

    • @BaumGeist@lemmy.ml
      link
      fedilink
      23 months ago

      Outside of controlling and rewriting the protocol: steal the keys used to generate the route or take over control of the server that hosts it