π‘οΈ Structural Tampering
What it means: The underlying building blocks of your webpage have been moved, added to, or deleted.
The Danger: Hackers often inject hidden containers to host malicious ads, phishing forms, or tracking pixels. Even if the website "looks" normal to a human, the digital foundation has been compromised.
π§ Content Tampering (Semantic)
What it means: The visible text on your website has been altered in a way that changes its meaning or intent.
The Danger: Defacers may replace your homepage text with political manifestos, fake news, or scam announcements. Our AI reads the text to ensure it still represents your brand.
ποΈ Visual Tampering
What it means: The website looks fundamentally different to the human eye. Colors are wrong, images are swapped, or elements are obscuring the screen.
The Danger: A classic sign of a full-scale defacement or a ransomware lock screen taking over the user interface.
πΈοΈ Supply Chain JS Poisoning
What it means: A third-party service you use (like a chat widget or analytics tool) has been hacked at their source, and is now serving malicious code into your website.
The Danger: This is a "Magecart" style attack where hackers steal credit card information directly from the browser without ever touching your actual servers.
π΅οΈββοΈ Crawler Cloaking (Device Spoofing)
What it means: The attacker has injected a script that checks whether the visitor is an automated security bot or a real human. If it's a bot, it shows the safe website. If it's a human, it serves the defacement.
The Danger: This is the ultimate headless evasion tactic. To defeat this, our AI engine dynamically rotates device fingerprints and browser spoofing techniques to force the server into revealing the true payload.