Baddns
Overview
Baddns is a web application security tool that appears across web application security workflows in this knowledge base. It is referenced as part of higher-level security analysis, investigation, monitoring, or validation activity rather than as an end in itself.
What It Is
Baddns is best understood as a web-application-security tool in this knowledge base. Its role is conceptual and system-facing rather than procedural: it gives analysts or defenders a structured way to examine evidence, model system behavior, or reason about security state.
How It Works
Baddns works by turning technical inputs into more interpretable outputs at the system level. Across the source skills, it appears as part of larger analysis, investigation, monitoring, or validation loops rather than as a standalone end state.
Core Concepts
- broken link hijacking
- blh
- subdomain takeover
- dead link
- expired domain
- supply chain
- external resource
- web application security
Typical Workflow
- --exclude-internal --filter-level 3 -o broken_links.txt
Use Cases
- When auditing web applications for references to expired or unclaimed external resources
- During supply chain security assessments of third-party script and resource dependencies
- When testing for subdomain takeover opportunities via dangling CNAME records
- During bug bounty hunting for broken link hijacking vulnerabilities
- When assessing the security of external resource dependencies in production applications
Limitations
- Output still depends on context, data quality, and surrounding analysis.
- The tool should be interpreted as part of a broader workflow, not as a complete answer by itself.
- Capabilities and visibility vary depending on environment, integrations, and available inputs.
Related Tools
- Broken Link Checker, Can I Take Over Xyz, Nuclei, Subjack, Wayback Machine
Sources
- exploiting-broken-link-hijacking