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Do Know Evil: web application vulnerabilities

4 de mayo de 2010
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6 comentarios :

H3dicho dijo...

"it takes a hacker to catch a hacker,"

GREAT!!

4 de mayo de 2010, 12:05
vint cerf dijo...

Sure this should be titled "Defense against the Dark Arts" at Bugwarts University?

vint

4 de mayo de 2010, 13:11
zprian dijo...

When you create an account, the user and password are sent by GET method.
Maybe, would be better send credentials via a POST form to avoid shoulder-surfing.

5 de mayo de 2010, 3:54
JOHNinKEYWEST dijo...

I had my wp blog hacked a while back with a script it was nasty. So this looks pretty interesting. I'm surprised it wasn't Jaiku :) I wonder why Google did work that site like they should of. Well anyway Google does many things I don't understand :) Thanks for the op to learn appreciate it

5 de mayo de 2010, 4:08
Unknown dijo...

I think the lab skipped over bookmarklet attacks. You don't even need to create the link. The home page field could be set to javascript:alert("a"). When I first played around with the web app, I wasn't sure what the home page was (before I configured my account), and I clicked on the only two there.

Also, by having the user expect a link, you can easily make up a phishing scheme (you could use a javascript redirect to replace the page in web history with your own site, which the pretends to be a warning that you are about to leave the site. then you send the user to some boring site, prompting the user to hit the back button. then, thanks to a cookie or remembering the ip address, your fake page asks the user to log in again.)

20 de mayo de 2010, 21:31
The great dijo...

There are many people stealing information and pasword.
please keep them away from doing it.
Thanks

29 de octubre de 2010, 5:13

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