Scammers and cybercriminals also use AWS CloudFront because it is cheap, fast, and reliable. They often host fake login pages (phishing kits) on these random subdomains. If you received an email with a link that looks like dnrweqffuwjtx.cloudfront.net and asks for a password or personal information, it is highly suspicious.

https://dnrweqffuwjtx.cloudfront.net

The text identifies a specific server located on Amazon's CloudFront network.

Because the domain consists of a long, nonsensical string of characters, it is frequently flagged by users as suspicious. However, the service itself is a legitimate technical tool. Cloudfront.net Malware - Microsoft Q&A

If you actually meant something else with "dnrweqffuwjtx cloud front net" , please explain — I’ll build the exact feature you need.

In the meantime, here’s a for CloudFront signed URLs (Python) — useful for restricting access to private content: