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29 de agosto de 2012
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18 comentarios :

oam dijo...

Interesting...
What about using a subdomain and having authentication cookies tied to *.domain.com with the HTTPOnly flag set? It does sound risky but I can't think of any attack.

29 de agosto de 2012, 13:37
Unknown dijo...

It not only sounds risky, hosting user content on sub domains is risky. I've seen several times that this has opened the way to exploitation of session fixation issues. There are further attack vectors as cross domain policies, CORS or document.domain for such setups.

So putting user provided content in a separate domain is an very good idea.

29 de agosto de 2012, 14:09
Michal Zalewski dijo...

oam: it's an improvement, but there are at least two problems with just using something like http[s]://userfiles.example.com/predictable_URL.pdf:

1) If the attacker knows the URL of any interesting private document within userfiles.example.com, and can host his own malicious file in the same origin, it is fairly easy to steal sensitive data.

2) Although httponly cookies can't be read back by scripts (spare for semi-frequent plugin bugs), they can be typically overwritten with some minimal effort - which will often have very serious consequences, especially for complex web apps.

29 de agosto de 2012, 14:25
oam dijo...

Yeah it makes sense. Thanks !

29 de agosto de 2012, 14:37
Unknown dijo...

Was the "Byte Order Mark (BOM) vulnerability reported to us by Masato Kinugawa" described anywhere in more detail?

29 de agosto de 2012, 18:35
Michal Zalewski dijo...

Probably not in English :-) But the basic idea is that Internet Explorer would give precedence to BOM indicators in the file over charset= value present in Content-Type or META, allowing many documents to suddenly become UTF-7 or so.

I believe that Microsoft folks changed this behavior earlier this year.

29 de agosto de 2012, 19:02
Will Sargent dijo...

To oam's question about subdomains, I believe that if you allow this and you have loose cookie rules, you are vulnerable to cookie tossing, aka "Same Origin Policy Abuse Techniques".

http://webapp-hardening.heroku.com/cookietossing

30 de agosto de 2012, 4:34
Nathan Belomy dijo...

The internet takes the path of Linux/Unix. All the design flaws will be changed in time. Changing the entire internet protocol suite is option 2. Think about writing a replacement for TCP/IP, it's a funny one.

31 de agosto de 2012, 14:31
Anónimo dijo...

Very informative post! Thanks a lot!

13 de septiembre de 2012, 4:53
Unknown dijo...

very informative point here.

15 de septiembre de 2012, 4:20
Web Hosting India dijo...

Security is one of the major issue with my website, I had my website with only HTML and was not using any dynamic feature expect some little things. After a good start I start to get success online and decide to go with a wordpress website, but within a few week after my new website launch, I felt real setback because my website was showing error and showing some hack message. Don't know enough about these, my developer fail to handle the situation so I got the website restored by my web host, but I am still worried if it will became much worse then ?

28 de julio de 2013, 13:32
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31 de octubre de 2013, 7:21
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20 de noviembre de 2013, 6:26
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5 de enero de 2014, 21:48
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Linux Reseller

26 de enero de 2014, 7:36
Unknown dijo...

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7 de abril de 2014, 1:15
Unknown dijo...

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21 de mayo de 2014, 9:27
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17 de julio de 2014, 13:13

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