Relative difficulty: Medium-Challenging
The BUS squares:
- COLUM(BUS) (41D: State capital with the nickname "Arch City")
- RE(BUS) (57D: "T_RN," for "No U-Turn," e.g.)
- SYLLA(BUS) (42D: Paper handed out as a matter of course?)
- GET OVER IT (3D: Punny advice to this puzzle's subject)
- DAREDEVIL (9D: Description of this puzzle's subject)
- LIVING ON THE EDGE (23A: Acting dangerously, like this puzzle's subject)
Typosquatting, also called URL hijacking, a sting site, a cousin domain, or a fake URL, is a form of cybersquatting, and possibly brandjacking which relies on mistakes such as typos made by Internet users when inputting a website address into a web browser. Should a user accidentally enter an incorrect website address, they may be led to any URL (including an alternative website owned by a cybersquatter).
The typosquatter's URL will usually be one of five kinds, all similar to the victim site address:
- A common misspelling, or foreign language spelling, of the intended site
- A misspelling based on a typographical error
- A plural of a singular domain name
- A different top-level domain: (e.g. .com instead of .org)
- An abuse of the Country Code Top-Level Domain (ccTLD) (.cm, .co, or .om instead of .com)
Similar abuses:
- Combosquatting - no misspelling, but appending an arbitrary word that appears legitimate, but that anyone could register.
- Doppelganger domain - omitting a period or inserting an extra period
- Appending terms such as sucks or -suckes to a domain name
Once in the typosquatter's site, the user may also be tricked into thinking that they are in fact in the real site, through the use of copied or similar logos, website layouts, or content. Spam emails sometimes make use of typosquatting URLs to trick users into visiting malicious sites that look like a given bank's site, for instance. (wikipedia)
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What I liked most about the puzzle, though, was how stupidly punny and playfully self-referential it was. It taunts you right off the bat with the corny GET OVER IT pun (before you even know what the puzzle is about), and then backs that up with a literal dad-joke STEAK pun (36A: "___ puns are a rare medium well done" (dad joke)—get it? rare? ... medium? ... well done? ... STEAK? ... it's pretty subtle). But the really, truly great pun = the buses themselves. A REBUS puzzle that uses REBUS as a REBUS answer!? A REBUS puzzle that is about buses—that is RE: BUSes!?! That ... is bold. That is the extra layer that takes this theme from good to great. From great to art. Now I know why EVEL seems to enter lower orbit there at the peak of his jump—it's a visual representation of the puzzle's own thematic ambition ... just leaving the earth's gravitational pull for a bit ("actually, if he left the earth's gravitational pull he wouldn't come back down" "you don't say, fascinating"). There's also something oddly pleasing, even soothing, about the fact that both ramps have EVEL's name on them. And that EVEL is a prime piece of crosswordese in his own right. This theme just keeps on giving.
What I didn't care for too much was the Heavy reliance on proper nouns, particularly contemporary pop culture proper nouns. The pop culture lane feels a little narrow, and it's definitely gonna prove exclusionary for a huge chunk of the solving population. I count three hip-hop/R&B answers, at least three TV shows, and a Super Mario Bros Movie —and that's on top of your usual array of proper nouns. Got to feeling like a trivia test at times, and though I knew some of the trivia ... I dunno, it just felt like it was leaning into pop culture so heavily that it was bound to wreck some solvers, and that is the worst way to get wrecked. I don't think there are any bad crosses. Everything seemed ultimately gettable, which is what counts. Still, the pop culture stuff felt mildly excessive today. But then I look up LIL MAMA (53A: Rapper with the 2007 hit "Lip Gloss") and find that she actually played Lisa "Left Eye" Lopes in the TV movie CrazySexyCool: The TLC [!] Story (see 43A: R&B trio with the album "CrazySexyCool"), and I'm right back to admiring the puzzle's winking playfulness. Whatever the puzzle's doing, it knows it's doing it, and it's doing it with confidence and purpose. And humor. And good will, I assume.
What else!?:
- 1A: Sonic boom generator? (SEGA) — because SEGA is the company that produces the Sonic (the Hedgehog) games, and yeah, I guess there was a (sales) "boom" in those games at some point, why not?
- 12A: Motion propellers (AYES) — not OARS!? Not OARS.
- 31A: Married a woman, archaically (WIVED) — LOL this offsets the pop culture trivia a bit. Gotta balance the contemporary with the archaic! I kept thinking the "a" in the clue was a typo, that the clue was supposed to be [Married woman, archaically]. Not sure what that answer would've been. But it doesn't matter now.
- 60A: "Dominus illuminatio ___") ("MEA") — this had to be it, but the gender of MEA seemed off to me. But no, turns out illuminatio is indeed feminine, so MEA, yep, makes sense. MEA culpa.
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