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Home/CyberSecurity News/Hackers Impersonate Marriott in New ‘rn Typo Trick
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Hackers Impersonate Marriott in New ‘rn Typo Trick

A sophisticated “homoglyph” phishing campaign is currently targeting customers of Marriott International and Microsoft. Attackers are registering fraudulent domains that replace the...

David kimber
David kimber
January 25, 2026 2 Min Read
0 0

A sophisticated “homoglyph” phishing campaign is currently targeting customers of Marriott International and Microsoft. Attackers are registering fraudulent domains that replace the letter “m” with the combination “rn” (r + n), creating fake websites that appear nearly identical to the legitimate ones.

Table Of Content

  • Recent Campaigns Identified
  • Marriott International Targeted
  • Microsoft Users Under Fire
  • Indicators of Compromise (IOCs)
  • How to Stay Safe

This technique, known as typosquatting or a homoglyph attack, exploits the way modern fonts display text. In many fonts, the letters “r” and “n” are placed next to each other (rn) look visually indistinguishable from the letter “m” (m).

Hackers rely on this visual trick to bypass your brain’s ability to spot errors. When you glance quickly at a URL like rnarriottinternational.com, your brain often “autocorrects” what it sees, assuming it says “Marriott”.

Recent Campaigns Identified

Marriott International Targeted

Security firm Netcraft recently identified a cluster of malicious domains attempting to impersonate the hotel giant. These domains are likely used to steal loyalty account credentials or personal guest data.

  • The primary domain identified is rnarriottinternational.com.
  • Attackers have also registered variations like rnarriotthotels.com to target specific hotel brands.

Microsoft Users Under Fire

Harley Sugarman, CEO of the security firm Anagram, highlighted a similar campaign targeting Microsoft users. Phishing emails in this campaign use the domain rnicrosoft.com to send fake security alerts or invoice notifications.

  • These emails mimic the official Microsoft logo, tone, and layout.
  • The attack is particularly dangerous on mobile devices, where small screens make the “rn” vs. “m” difference almost impossible to see.

Indicators of Compromise (IOCs)

The following domains have been flagged as malicious. Security teams should block these immediately, and users should be wary of any links directing to them.

Phishing Domain Impersonated Service Typosquatting Technique Detection Difficulty
rnarriottinternational.com Marriott International ‘m’ replaced with ‘rn’ Critical
rnarriotthotels.com Marriott Hotels ‘m’ replaced with ‘rn’ Critical
rnicrosoft.com Microsoft 365 / Login ‘m’ replaced with ‘rn’ High (Mobile)
micros0ft.com Microsoft ‘o’ replaced with ‘0’ Medium
microsoft-support.com Microsoft Support Hyphenation / Suffix Low

How to Stay Safe

  1. Expand the Sender Address: On mobile email apps, tap the sender’s name to reveal the full email address. Look closely for the “rn” trick.
  2. Hover Before You Click: On a computer, hover your mouse cursor over links without clicking to see the actual destination URL.
  3. Manual Entry: If you receive an urgent email about a hotel booking or account reset, do not click the link. Open a browser and type marriott.com or microsoft.com yourself.
  4. Use Password Managers: A password manager will not auto-fill your credentials on a fake site like rnicrosoft.com because it recognizes that the domain is different from the real one.

Disclaimer: HackersRadar reports on cybersecurity threats and incidents for informational and awareness purposes only. We do not engage in hacking activities, data exfiltration, or the hosting or distribution of stolen or leaked information. All content is based on publicly available sources.

Tags:

AttackExploitHackerphishingSecurity

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David kimber

David kimber

David is a penetration tester turned security journalist with expertise in mobile security, IoT vulnerabilities, and exploit development. As an OSCP-certified security professional, David brings hands-on technical experience to his reporting on vulnerabilities and security research. His articles often feature detailed technical analysis of exploits and provide actionable defense recommendations. David maintains an active presence in the security research community and has contributed to multiple open-source security tools.

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