Link shortening has become a commonplace on services like Facebook and Twitter. Heck, even Google shortens URLs within its products now. People seem to be getting more used to the idea that shortened URLs, despite not showing you where they lead, are safe. Part of that, is that the companies that are doing the shortening keep blacklists of sites with malware or spyware, to keep people from accidentally visiting sites that will do harm.
Newcomer ShadyURL makes no such claims though. This wonderfully satirical service turns even legitimate URLs into something that even the least tech-savvy friend or family member would know better than to click on. It inserts anything from what appear to be hijacking commands, to profanity and the names of well-known malware. In other words, whomever you send one of these links to is likely to say "there's no way I'm clicking on that," even though it's likely to lead to a safe site.
Here are some of the gems it spit out on some common sites:
Facebook.com became: http://5z8.info/inject_worm_w0x6_open.exe
Twitter.com became: http://5z8.info/hack-outlook_z6t4_warez
Cnet.com became: http://5z8.info/begin-bank-account-xfer_m3y6_whitepower
News: URL's No One Would Click On!!
Submitted by kakroo on Fri, 2010-02-19 14:54.
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