Account Hacked, Sites Gone, Now what???

56 replies
Someone managed to get into my Hostgator account using a password and deleted about 5 of my sites. Hostgator said they hadn't backed up the sites yet and had overwritten the previous backups they had. I was also in the middle of a product launch when it happened. Long story short is that I've lost about $10K worth of work and sales on those sites.

Is there anything I can do to try and recover any of the layouts ect. from those sites? Even just having screenshots of the webpages would help in trying to recreate the sites.

I'm also giving a huge thumbs down to Hostgator. I will be switching hosting companies soon.
#account #hacked #sites
  • Profile picture of the author Ryan Jericho
    Banned
    They must have earlier backups? Thats insane.
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  • Go to https://archive.org/web/

    Put in your URL's.

    If the wayback machine took some snapshots, maybe you can download some layouts etc.

    Let me know if you had some luck there.
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    Arnold Stolting - Stolting Media Group
    "I LOVE The Song! The Vibe Is Positive And Firm!" - Kymani Marley. (Son of Bob Marley).

    "Very High Quality!" Jeremy Harding - Manager / Producer. Sean Paul.
    "They Are FANTASTIC!" - Willie Crawford.

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    • Profile picture of the author dougp
      Long story short is that I've lost about $10K worth of work and sales on those sites.
      Sorry to hear that, what type of work you had done? Perhaps you can email your designer/programmer asking for the backup of the files? Also, i imagine that if you download it you should have a copy of it somewhere on your computer. I would recommend typing in queries of the files names to see what you can find. Best of luck.
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    • Profile picture of the author Kotkov
      First thing I would do, if your websites got indexed by google, search site:yourlostwebsite.com on google, and see if you can pull up Cached copies of those page. Check bing & yahoo as well, but google is usually very fast in this.

      Hope you are able to do this.
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  • Profile picture of the author willN
    actually, try this.

    google yours sites like this "site:www.sitename.com"

    then, when your pages come up, click on the little arrow on the right of the links and click "view cached copy"

    It should show a previous version of your site that google indexed and copied.

    Do it as quickly as you can because they do not last forever.
    Hope this helps
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  • Profile picture of the author OnlineAddict
    Hostgator is the worst shared hosting when it comes to backups, I only used them for 1 domain out of hundreds...and that was lesson enough. Never again.
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  • Profile picture of the author azni
    Truly sorry to hear that. I have heard many complaints about Hostgator's security. But isn't hostgator suppose to perform backup once a week? .
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    • Profile picture of the author mojojuju
      Originally Posted by OnlineAddict View Post

      Hostgator is the worst shared hosting when it comes to backups, I only used them for 1 domain out of hundreds...and that was lesson enough. Never again.
      Originally Posted by azni View Post

      Truly sorry to hear that. I have heard many complaints about Hostgator's security. But isn't hostgator suppose to perform backup once a week? .
      You should always have your own backups and never rely upon a host to keep backups. Many hosts offer free backups, but if you read their TOS, you'll probably find that they won't guarantee them. OP says he lost "$10K worth of work and sales on those sites." Why trust your business to be backed up by somebody you're paying $5/month to for hosting and who doesn't even guarantee that the backups will be there when you need them? The only value of a host-protected backup is as an extra backup, in addition to the backups you make, and one that you won't have to upload to your hosting account if needed. But you can't count on it.
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      • Profile picture of the author bt
        Originally Posted by mojojuju View Post

        You should always have your own backups and never rely upon a host to keep backups. Many hosts offer free backups, but if you read their TOS, you'll probably find that they won't guarantee them. OP says he lost "$10K worth of work and sales on those sites." Why trust your business to be backed up by somebody you're paying $5/month to for hosting and who doesn't even guarantee that the backups will be there when you need them? The only value of a host-protected backup is as an extra backup, in addition to the backups you make, and one that you won't have to upload to your hosting account if needed. But you can't count on it.
        I agree 100%, always backup your own sites, never rely on your host.

        Everytime you edit your website/websites do a backup of them, it may sound like a hassle, but it will save you a ton of headaches In the long run.

        I back my websites up to a usb flash drive, I used to back them up to Google Drive, but i find usb flash drives to be more reliable.
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    • Profile picture of the author nicheblogger75
      Originally Posted by azni View Post

      Truly sorry to hear that. I have heard many complaints about Hostgator's security. But isn't hostgator suppose to perform backup once a week? .
      They do perform a back up once a week. I had something similar happen to me when I was just a "newbie" and hadn't realized that one MUST carry their own file & database backups.

      The way it works is like this: Hostgator will do a backup once a week as long as you are within their parameters (I believe it's less 10,000MB and 100,000 inodes (files). If you are over that they will not bother to take a backup for you.

      The problem is that let's say they back up your account on 8 pm every Saturday evening. Should a hacker come into your account and wipe out everything Saturday at 7:50 pm, when Hostgator takes your backup at 8 pm, they simply backup an empty account. The new backup overwrites the previous backup so in effect what happens is your account is now overwritten with an empty backup and all of your files are gone.

      They do not keep previous backups and if you push the issue they will simply direct you to the part in their TOS where it says you are responsible for backing up for your files and by agreeing to their TOS you agree not to hold them accountable if all of your files are lost.

      While it may seem like Hostgator is the bad guy here, the fact is that they are not. YOU are responsible for having backups of all of your website files & databases. If your account gets hacked and you lose everything and you have not taken the proper precautions then you have no one to blame but yourself.

      I was very upset after the first time it happened to me but when I look back on it I was't using a very strong password and I wasn't taking my own backups, hence it was my own fault. Lesson learned.

      Now I take my own backups and store them on a portable hard drive and I protect my account with a 20 character password containing an array of letters, numbers, and symbols.

      Also, never store your password information in your email account as I now believe that was how the hackers obtained all of the information they needed to infiltrate my account.
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  • Profile picture of the author JeanneLynn
    I don't know how Hostgator stays in business. I switched when they were sold to that new company. Find a company with decent customer service.

    I hope you get your sites back.
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  • Profile picture of the author kpmedia
    Originally Posted by vallejomedia View Post

    I'm also giving a huge thumbs down to Hostgator. I will be switching hosting companies soon.
    Be very sure that you don't "switch" to the same company. Hostgator = EIG.
    And EIG = Bluehost, Hostmonster, Fatcow, JustHost, and 50+ others. Avoid them all!

    For a quality non-EIG host, consider Site5 or Arvixe.
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  • Profile picture of the author BWHadam
    View google cache to get some web pages reconstructed.
    Hostgator should have a copy of your website. Ask them for the oldest backup copy.

    Backup is a very important task.
    Always have your own backups downloaded to your local disk, Backup at least once a month to avoid the big trouble.
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  • What's up with all these Gator haters? "Every" company that has a large customer base will have many unhappy customers. If you move to another hosting company, it will not eliminate the possibility of being hacked, not being backed up, or getting crappy customer service when something goes wrong. Hardware is hardware, and stuff goes wrong, no matter what company name you put on it.
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    Arnold Stolting - Stolting Media Group
    "I LOVE The Song! The Vibe Is Positive And Firm!" - Kymani Marley. (Son of Bob Marley).

    "Very High Quality!" Jeremy Harding - Manager / Producer. Sean Paul.
    "They Are FANTASTIC!" - Willie Crawford.

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  • Profile picture of the author figuringmoneyout
    Every large company with shared hosting can make mistakes like that. It's really up to you as the site owner to do backups. That being said, there are other ways to get the work back, even if it's copy/pasting from cached/web archives. It might suck but that is a lot of work to lose!
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  • Profile picture of the author Tim_Carter
    So don't you have the stuff on your local computer? You had to upload it from somewhere. I have everything on my computer that is on my server.

    I sympathize with you, however as said above, you need to take responsibility for backing up your own stuff. Try the Google cache thing. That may recover some of it.
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  • Profile picture of the author Janice Sperry
    Don't forget to improve your security before or as soon as you can after you restore your sites. I still have a few older sites on a hostgator account. You can see the last time they were backed up by logging in to your cPanel and looking about halfway down on the left side. It is usually within 7 days or less. If you work on your sites daily like some of us - creating a backup is the last task every day.
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  • Profile picture of the author vallejomedia
    Thanks for all the suggestions~ I found some cached copies using google, but some had already been overwritten. I actually found 1 thumbnail of my homepage for one of the sites on statscrop.com. Are there any other indexing sites like this that may have images of homepages?

    Takeaways~

    1.) I know I am ultimately responsible for my sites. I also know that if you do this stuff long enough you are going to have issues like these come up.

    2.) I assumed (incorrectly) that I had at least some minimal amount of protection with Hostgator in terms of a backup. They ultimately gave me some line about how this just happened at the exact "wrong time" where they had overwritten a previous backup and had not done the next one. But it's not like these sites are brand new. The fact that they didn't even have some type of really old backup of a site is what really makes me mad.

    3.) This was the final straw with Hostgator for me. Their support is only good about 50% of the time anymore. Not having my own backups is definitely my fault. However, I'm still searching for a new hosting provider because Hostgator just drops the ball too much.

    any hosting suggestions are welcomed....
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    • Profile picture of the author dnkume
      any hosting suggestions are welcomed....[/QUOTE]

      First vallejomedia, I want to say sorry for your lost, losing such amount of money and effort put into building your site, it really painful.

      For a hosting suggestion, I will personally suggest that you try bulletproofvps, I have been with them for quite a long time, they are cool and never have issues like that.
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    • Profile picture of the author LarryJay
      Hey I am done with Hostgator too, and if the next host is like Hostgator, I will be done with them as well. I disagree with all hosting companies are the same and things happen. If that is true, then is there anyone out there that wants to start a new reliable hosting company? You might just make a couple of bucks in the process.
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  • Profile picture of the author RogueOne
    "Every" company that has a large customer base will have many unhappy customers.
    Not even close to true.

    HG has a well earned, bad reputation. I can show you emails where a HG customer service rep. flat out lied to me about PP policies in an attempt to rob me.

    "Every" large company does not do that, or anything close to it.
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    • Originally Posted by RogueOne View Post

      Not even close to true.

      HG has a well earned, bad reputation. I can show you emails where a HG customer service rep. flat out lied to me about PP policies in an attempt to rob me.

      "Every" large company does not do that, or anything close to it.
      Your statement proves my point. The larger the company (12,000 servers?) and the larger its customer base, (400,000?) the larger the chances of an unhappy customer. In your case HG may have hired a bad apple. With 500+ employees or whatever the number is, that's bound to happen. And so yes, "Every" large company will have such a story.
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      Arnold Stolting - Stolting Media Group
      "I LOVE The Song! The Vibe Is Positive And Firm!" - Kymani Marley. (Son of Bob Marley).

      "Very High Quality!" Jeremy Harding - Manager / Producer. Sean Paul.
      "They Are FANTASTIC!" - Willie Crawford.

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      • Profile picture of the author kpmedia
        Originally Posted by stoltingmediagroup View Post

        HG may have hired a bad apple.
        ...And so yes, "Every" large company will have such a story.
        No.

        Hostgator is garbage:
        - http://www.warriorforum.com/main-int...-my-sites.html
        - http://www.warriorforum.com/main-int...s-traffic.html
        - http://www.warriorforum.com/main-int...-all-down.html
        - http://www.warriorforum.com/internet...hostgator.html
        - http://www.warriorforum.com/main-int...-want-out.html
        - http://www.warriorforum.com/main-int...-hour-now.html

        I have no idea why people still suggest that in 2014. It's terrible. It's not even the same "Hostgator" anymore, not since summer 2012, and is nothing more than an EIG brand now. There are better hosts.

        Hosts that actually have backups.
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        • Originally Posted by kpmedia View Post

          No. Hostgator is garbage:
          1. Pulling up a whole list of WF complaints about hostgator, while having a signature file recommending a hostgator alternative so you can get paid, is questionable.

          2. All of these posts continue to prove my point that the larger the user base, the more complaints there will be. I've had over 250 Domain names at one point on hostgator, so yes sure we've had our issues. Backup failures, downtime, an occasional shitty customer service rep... whatever.... but I did not move to another host because of it, or run in here and whine about it. All hosts screw up. Period.
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          Arnold Stolting - Stolting Media Group
          "I LOVE The Song! The Vibe Is Positive And Firm!" - Kymani Marley. (Son of Bob Marley).

          "Very High Quality!" Jeremy Harding - Manager / Producer. Sean Paul.
          "They Are FANTASTIC!" - Willie Crawford.

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          • Profile picture of the author eeeasyas12345
            Originally Posted by stoltingmediagroup View Post

            All hosts screw up. Period.
            Very true, I have had accounts with 3 different hosting companies, and they all screwed up at one point or another. One of them wouldn't even tell me what was going on with my site, only thing they did was give me suggestions so I can find out what went wrong on my own, like try this or try that instead of sayin this is what is causing your site's problems, and that's what needs to be done to fix it.
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          • Profile picture of the author kpmedia
            Originally Posted by stoltingmediagroup View Post

            2. All of these posts continue to prove my point that the larger the user base, the more complaints there will be..
            No.

            - LiquidWeb
            - ServInt
            - MediaTemple
            - Softlayer

            Those are also large companies. I challenge you to find as high a percentage of complaints as you see with EIG. (Hint: Won't happen.) Even similar-to-HG companies like Site5 and Arvixe have nowhere near the glut of complaints as EIG.

            And again, there is no "Hostgator" anymore. That's nothing more than a mascot and brand name. EIG is the company now, and has been since summer 2012.

            You're defending a sinking ship, insisting it's just a small leak.
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            • Originally Posted by kpmedia View Post

              You're defending a sinking ship, insisting it's just a small leak.
              It's difficult for anyone to have an honest discussion with you regarding Hostgator when your negative view point and opinions regarding Hostgator appear to be biased. Your Anti Hostgator stance in your posts attached to recommending a Hostgator alternative in your signature file explains why I feel that way.
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              Arnold Stolting - Stolting Media Group
              "I LOVE The Song! The Vibe Is Positive And Firm!" - Kymani Marley. (Son of Bob Marley).

              "Very High Quality!" Jeremy Harding - Manager / Producer. Sean Paul.
              "They Are FANTASTIC!" - Willie Crawford.

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              • Profile picture of the author kindsvater
                Originally Posted by stoltingmediagroup View Post

                It's difficult for anyone to have an honest discussion with you regarding Hostgator when your negative view point and opinions regarding Hostgator appear to be biased.
                No more than your blind defense of the company. HostGator has had multiple, extraordinary outages recently. The one caused by the migration was inexcusable and involved deceptive statements about what was happening.

                The "HostGator" loved by so many on this forum is now owned by a different company. Since the ownership change the new company has earned its bad reputation. This has nothing to do with how many accounts the company has.

                As for the hack, make sure you run a virus scan on your computer. I suggest scans using multiple anti-virus software programs. The hack could have been through a script, such as an old WordPress install. Or, maybe it came from your computer. Doing what you can to recreate your websites, or moving hosts, is not a solution to a repeat hack until you close the vulnerability that lead to the incident.

                You should also review your raw server logs to try and find a file vulnerability and the IP address of the attacker, so you can ban the IP.

                .
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                • Originally Posted by kindsvater View Post

                  No more than your blind defense of the company.
                  Brian,

                  I mentioned earlier that I had over 250 Domain names at one point on hostgator, and that we've had our issues. Backup failures, downtime, an occasional shitty customer service rep... therefore I'm not blindly defending them, I'm a customer.

                  I do understand many people's view however regarding hostgator. I'm not saying that HG is the host of the century and that everyone should love them. My main beef is when WF posters are promoting an alternative to HG as an incomer source, while attacking HG in their posts. I also notice allot of people quickly jumping ship, (from any host) as soon as something goes wrong, as if the next host is not going to have an issue. I don't recommend HG nor do I not recommended them. Therefore I am neutral on the topic.
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                  Arnold Stolting - Stolting Media Group
                  "I LOVE The Song! The Vibe Is Positive And Firm!" - Kymani Marley. (Son of Bob Marley).

                  "Very High Quality!" Jeremy Harding - Manager / Producer. Sean Paul.
                  "They Are FANTASTIC!" - Willie Crawford.

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              • Profile picture of the author UnkwnUsr
                Originally Posted by stoltingmediagroup View Post

                It's difficult for anyone to have an honest discussion with you regarding Hostgator when your negative view point and opinions regarding Hostgator appear to be biased. Your Anti Hostgator stance in your posts attached to recommending a Hostgator alternative in your signature file explains why I feel that way.
                Not to mention that these types only come around when the topic of hosting comes up. Putting down EIG companies while pushing their resell accounts at much higher prices. Is the service better? Who knows? Web hosting is always great until something goes wrong.
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  • Profile picture of the author Tim3
    My sympathies Vallejo,
    In case you haven't already, don't forget to check the cached pages of Bing and Yahoo as well, they are much slower than Google and you may well find some of your content,

    use the same search operator as for G... site:h**p://yoursite
    But you must act very quickly before your domain gets another crawl.
    hope you manage to recover your work
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  • Profile picture of the author femtop
    This is so revealing. I have some WP sites on Hostgator. How do I do the backup pls?
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    • Profile picture of the author femtop
      Originally Posted by femtop View Post

      This is so revealing. I have some WP sites on Hostgator. How do I do the backup pls?
      Update: I was able to use this WP plug-in for the back up.
      UpdraftPlus
      Has anyone used this plug-in before and how reliable is it?
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  • Profile picture of the author biggenius
    Originally Posted by vallejomedia View Post

    Someone managed to get into my Hostgator account using a password and deleted about 5 of my sites. Hostgator said they hadn't backed up the sites yet and had overwritten the previous backups they had. I was also in the middle of a product launch when it happened. Long story short is that I've lost about $10K worth of work and sales on those sites.

    Is there anything I can do to try and recover any of the layouts ect. from those sites? Even just having screenshots of the webpages would help in trying to recreate the sites.

    I'm also giving a huge thumbs down to Hostgator. I will be switching hosting companies soon.
    And you trust them for your product? You don't take backup yourself? You should use dedicated server somewhere. PM me, if you need help with servers.
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  • Profile picture of the author johnben1444
    Are you sure Gator didnt backup your site?

    The last time I mistakenly deleted some database I contacted them and they reinstalled it for a little fee which I can't remember.

    Though it was return to the previous look and not the earliest.

    You might want to look at the WayBackMachine and start afresh..

    I guess you have learnt the hard way like me, always backup everything you do because you never can tell.
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    • Profile picture of the author bestadservice
      hey guys - just my input for those who use Hostgator :
      now it has a offer from codeguard (cloud backup) for only $49 per year for multiple websites or $19 for 1 website I think, you can check that inside members area

      I am using that and it backups everything automatically daily, db and files, very useful
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  • Profile picture of the author yoangov
    Really, I'm impressed how HG is still in bussiness. Their affiliate program sux. Their hosting sux. Their support... sux big time!

    I switched them a long time ago.

    Perhaps try asking them if they could backup your website for money, perhaps this is their goal, lol?

    Next time use the software KeePass to manage and store your passwords. It will help you to have a very strong different passwords for every account you are using on the web. Also be careful what links you are opening, and don't accept any images from strangers, at least don't open them before you scan it in virustotal.com
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  • Profile picture of the author digitalsapien
    WOW I can't believe hostgators are doing this.. they don't have previous backups??? crazy!
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  • Profile picture of the author billspaced
    Most good lessons are learned the hard way. You and only you are ultimately responsible for your backups.

    I'm very sorry to hear about your losses. That sucks. But now, rebuild, learn, apply the lessons, and grow.
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  • Profile picture of the author TheFranchiseMarketer
    Banned
    OUCH! Never been a fan of Hostgator. You should sign up with Godaddy instead. Also, whenever you create a password try to make sure its one even you would find a bit difficult to remember. Even if you have to save the password in your notepad it would be very useful. The thing about hackers is that most of them know the usually dummy passwords that most people use and they also try different variations of the same dummy password. This is very important.
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  • Profile picture of the author ST x
    Yeah try the Way back time machine recomended by other members here in this post - and try the Google cache method - they are the only two options I know of working in a case like this (where there are no back ups at all?!).

    +Thanks for the warriors who posted that advice.

    Also, I joined here yesterday and there was a Warrior asking about promoting his line of work, which is hacking a security - maybe you should look at working with a guy like this in the future to ensure your sites and content are secure.

    Another note OP, you mentioned that someone got into your account using a password?

    This tells me that you are not choosing good passwords - and your not securing your sites properly.

    When choosing a password use small letters, caps LETTERS, numb3rs AND punctuation if allowed - even my Warrior Forum password has a bunch of $'s mixed in with it.

    If you need any additional advice or help with your security then drop me a PM - I'm no guru in the hacking feild but I'm quite clued up on the subject and up-to-date. I can certainly point you in the right direction.

    Sorry I couldn't be more helpful - just make sure you learn from your mistakes to prevent something like this happening again in the future.

    Peace.

    Edit:

    Some quick and easy tips to help keep your security... and therefore business...

    a) Make for yourself a strong password - using ALLtypesOF#!$$@kk-writing.
    b) Make cold back ups of everything - a cold back up is a back up on a seperate machine which is not connected to the internet. (This way, if you are hacked or you get infected with a virus, your cold back up will be protected)
    c) Read up about and stay aware of the latest security threats. - Blogs and forums on IT security are a good place to hang out to stay informed.
    d) Make sure ALL you software, extensions, plug-in's are up-to-date. Hackers use bugs in the coding often to do their dirty work - staying up to date helps keep most of the bugs patched and closes up many security threats.


    I hope my post was helpful

    Peace.
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  • Profile picture of the author vishwa
    This is really ridiculous that your hosting provider (Hostgator) did not take back ups. Just irresponsible hosting company. This will teach us all that never rely on your hosting provider and take your own backups weekly, do it daily if possible. By the way move to another web hosting provider which is not a EIG group. You can opt for Arivxe, Godaddy, Hostdime etc.
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  • Profile picture of the author WPExpert
    Originally Posted by vallejomedia View Post

    Hostgator said they hadn't backed up the sites yet and had overwritten the previous backups they had.
    HostGator are a total waste of space. They've taken the view with two of my clients this week alone, not to bother. In other words its cheaper for them to lose a customer on a cheap yearly contract and get their disk space back when he gets fed up with waiting for them to do something, and wanders off.

    The biggest problem with trying to unhack your website is that the infection or code-injection or whatever it is that is the root of the problem, may well not have come from your website in the first place. Hostgator are #1 public enemy for this.

    And all cheap shared hosting providers now regularly take the least cost route and simply block you from access until you get fed up with their endless and pointless automatic emails, and just drift away.

    Then they can wipe their hard disk and start again with a new piece of Internet real estate.

    The secret is to get someone who knows how to protect your site for you and avoid the issue in the first place.

    Sooner or later you will either learn how or find someone you can trust.

    Terence.
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  • Profile picture of the author mubashir
    You can get latest google cache of your website simply. Go to google nand type >> site:yourdomain.com . You can view cache and ask any programer he will able to create similar website in hours. Thanks
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  • Profile picture of the author fatchap
    I use hostgator. No problems so far. All my passwords long and complicated. Hope you get sorted.
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  • Profile picture of the author cyberzolo
    No backups? Then time to get busy and start creating more sites, move on from it.
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    • Profile picture of the author Walter Parrish
      1 - shared hosting is usually not the best option. try upgrading to reseller hosting or vps hosting or something bigger if you can afford it. if not make plans to make that move in the future.

      2 - as far as large hosting companies are concerned it doesn't matter the size some will cater to the customers needs some won't I don't care if they got a million customers or just one. no excuses in this biz.

      3 - when you are with a hosting company never be afraid to change companies especially when they start taking over other companies. I've seen companies do this to often only to move their current customers or customers who don't access their accounts often to the bad servers. I've also seen companies who start out great only to diminish over time. we're talking about tech support within a minute going to support within 72hrs to a week.

      4 - so, always make backups which I'm sure you've learned now and never be afraid to pack up everything and move to the next best host of the day. some hosts I can recommend Liquid & Blue Host, if you are looking for something larger like VPS - virtual private server, or dedicated servers I recommend Knownhost.
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    • Profile picture of the author professorrosado
      Are the Databases gone? If not - you're good. Just deleting the WP files doesn't leave you without your site.
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  • Profile picture of the author spearce000
    Is there anything left of your sites at all? Sometimes - especially if you're using WordPress - the hacker will just compromise the theme or the database. These can usually be recovered from within Cpanel or WordPress dashboard.

    If they were simple HTML sites, do you not still have them on your computer? Like others have mentioned, archive.org are your best bet if everything is lost.

    Certainly find a better hosting company - one that does backups automatically!
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  • Profile picture of the author TraderAgency
    I had a hostgator account hacked one time. And when I input my website address there was a black screen with red arabic writing saying I was hacked by the turkish hacker. Thank God he didnt delete everything though. I feel bad for you. Did you design the sites yourself? If not check with your designer or programmer and see if they have a copy.
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  • Profile picture of the author SocialMediaZone
    Always remember to backup your sites, even when you switch hosting from hostgator to another company, no one can guarantee the same problem won't happen again. So, don't rely on those hosting companys. Backup your sites on regular basis is the safest way!
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  • Profile picture of the author vikash_kumar
    This is a very old thread....thread starter have reported this issue back in January...
    However...This thread is live again and here I want to share my experience and wisdom as well...

    First....Your site can be hacked...anytime...and it does not matter which hosting company you are using....
    You can not stop bad elements in our society and in world....They will always be there...
    The best think about these hackers are....they are lazy....creatures
    If you just make your sites.....bit harder for them to crack....they are not going to invest their time and hard-work on your site and will certainly move further in search of a soft target.

    The Only advice, i can give here is...you should at-least have some very common protocols of safety and security of your site's in place to avoid such incidences.

    Like timely...Off-Site backups (Well it's number -1)

    I believe that you should invest your time or money first on Safety and security of your sites than anything else like SEO and other content generation activity.

    I have seen many have lost their investment on their sites...just because they have chosen to invest in some other aspects of their online business than to first make their own site's safe and secure.
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