SYDNEY: Google Malaysia website is seeing a hacked page that says “Google Malaysia hacked by TiGER-M@TE”.
Although TiGER-M@TE claims to have hacked the search giant’s local website, it seems to be another DNS redirect attack on the .my domain.
Google Malaysia has also confirmed that its servers have not been compromised. The problem is not affecting all users a quick check revealed that Maxis and Digi users are not seeing the hacked page.
“We’re aware that some users are having trouble connecting to google.com.my, or are being directed to a different website. Google services for the google.com.my domain are not compromised. We’ve reached out to the organisation responsible for managing this domain name and hope to have the issue resolved,” the company said in a statement.
Also, Google Malaysia has declined to comment further but has confirmed that it’s a DNS redirect attack on its official Twitter page.
According to the tweet, affected users should visit google.com/ncr until the problem is fixed. The recovery process will usually take about 24 to 48 hours.






