Unicode has
code points for many strongly homoglyphic characters, known as "confusables". and were called to particular attention in regard to
internationalized domain names. In theory at least, one might deliberately spoof a domain name by replacing one character with its homoglyph, thus creating a second domain name, not readily distinguishable from the first, that can be exploited in
phishing (
see main article IDN homograph attack). In many
typefaces, the
Greek letter ⟨Α⟩, the
Cyrillic letter ⟨А⟩ and the
Latin letter ⟨A⟩ are visually identical, as are the Latin letter ⟨a⟩ and the Cyrillic letter ⟨а⟩ (the same can be applied to the Latin letters "aBceHKopTxy" and the Cyrillic letters ""). A domain name can be spoofed simply by substituting one of these forms for another in a separately registered name. There are also many examples of near-homoglyphs within the same script such as ⟨í⟩ (with an
acute accent) and ⟨i⟩ (with a
tittle), ⟨É⟩ (
E-acute) and ⟨Ė⟩ (⟨E⟩ with dot above) and ⟨È⟩ (
E-grave), ⟨Í⟩ (capital ⟨I⟩ with an acute accent) and ⟨ĺ⟩ (lowercase ⟨L⟩ with acute accent). When discussing this specific security issue, any two sequences of similar characters may be assessed in terms of its potential to be taken as a
homoglyph pair, or if the sequences clearly appear to be words, as
pseudo-homographs (noting again that these terms may themselves cause confusion in other contexts). In the
Chinese language, many
simplified Chinese characters are homoglyphs of the corresponding
traditional Chinese characters. Efforts by
TLD registries and
Web browser designers aim to minimize the risks of homoglyphic confusion. Commonly, this is achieved by prohibiting names which mix character sets from multiple languages (
toys-Я-us.org, using the Cyrillic letter ⟨
Я⟩, would be invalid, but
wíkipedia.org and
wikipedia.org still exist as different websites); Canada's
.ca registry goes one step further by requiring names which differ only in
diacritics to have the same owner and same registrar. The handling of Chinese characters varies: in
.org and
.info registration of one variant renders the other unavailable to anyone, while in
.biz the traditional and simplified versions of the same name are delivered as a two-domain bundle which both point to the same
domain name server. Relevant documentation will be found both on the developers' Web sites, and on an IDN Forum provided by
ICANN. The Cyrillic letter () not only looks like Latin (), but also occupies the same button in JCUKEN-QWERTY hybrid layout keyboards. This design nuance can be seen on the C/С button represented in
Keyboard Monument in
Yekaterinburg. == See also ==