Spotting three fake sites and comparing them to there original can easier sometimes to detect than others. For example, a retail store, you ever notice how sometimes when you search brands like Nike more than on site appears sometimes. You’ll see “Nike.com” which is the site and then you’ll see “Nike.c0m” which isn’t. Now this is obvious to most as you may say to yourself why is the “o” in the fake one oddly shaped. But it is more commonly confused with news sites and or blog sites. Like the popular cnn.com we all know and use for news and research. I’ve come across cnn.com.de or cnn.com.co which aren’t the real deal they are imposter sites. Which you must be careful if you are using a fake news site and you got to site it in a paper. Because then your paper is now falsified due to the fake of pulling information from the wrong source. The indicator for this fake site is the “.co” at the end. Lastly the most common fake bank sites. I feel these are the most popular these days with people trying to take peoples funds. I recently myself got an email for a PayPal link to reset my password someone had attempted to login to my account. I was nearly quick to do it until I hovered over the link. The normal PayPal link is “paypal.com” but the link I had in the email was “pay-pail.com”. Of course, it was one of those click here and it would direct me to the link to reset. Which If I had done so the hacker would have seen my old and new password to then get into my account. But the issue with the fake site is clear as the real deal is spelled “PayPal”. The fake used “Pay-Pail”, first it isn’t spelled correctly and second there is no dash involved with the real deal.