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Top Ten Web Hacking Techniques of 2011

2013年08月31日 ⁄ 综合 ⁄ 共 4950字 ⁄ 字号 评论关闭

Every year the Web security community produces a stunning amount of new hacking techniques published in various white papers, blog posts, magazine articles, mailing list emails, etc. Within the thousands of pages are the latest ways to attack websites, Web
browsers, Web proxies, and so on. Beyond individual vulnerability instances with CVE numbers or system compromises, we’re talking about actual new and creative methods of Web-based attack. The Top Ten Web Hacking Techniques list encourages information sharing,
provides a centralized knowledge-base, and recognizes researchers who contribute excellent work.

How the winners are selected…

 

Phase 1: Open community voting (Ballot) [COMPLETE]

From of the field of 51 total entries received listed below, each voter (open to everyone) ranks their fifteen favorite Web Hacking Techniques using
a survey. Each entry (listed alphabetically) get a certain amount of points depending on how highly they are individually ranked in each ballot. For example, an each entry in position #1 will be given 15 points, position #2 will get 14 point, position #3 gets
13 points, and so on down to 1 point. At the end all points from all ballots will be tabulated to ascertain the top fifteen overall. And NO selecting the same attack multiple times! :) (they’ll
be deleted)

Voting will close at the end of the day this Monday, February 20.

[CLOSED] The more people who vote, the better the results! Vote Now!

 

Phase 2: Panel of Security Experts [IN PROGRESS]

From the result of the open community voting, the top fifteen Web Hacking Techniques will be voted upon by panel of security experts (to be announced soon). Using the exact same voting process as phase 1, the judges will rank the final fifteen
based of novelty, impact, and overall pervasiveness. Once tabulation is completed, we’ll have the Top Ten Web Hacking Techniques of 2011!

Voting will close at the end of the day on Sunday, February 26.

Soon after the winners will be announced!

Good luck everyone

 

The Final 15:

Hundreds of votes were cast during the open vote — a great turn out. Thank you everyone for taking the time! 44% of the respondents were self-described “Breakers,” follow by 22% “Defenders,” 16% “Builders,” and 17% did not specify. There was a very smooth distribution
of points totals across the range of entries. Clearly everyone had their favorites. Of course we saw a lot of ballot stuffing action, which required a substantive amount of clean-up, but when ranking a Web hacking techniques’ its kind of what you expect :)This
is exactly why we have a final 15 process first, so the top ten outcome isn’t negatively affected. Any entries that obviously don’t belong in the top ten are easily eliminated during the “Panel of Security Experts” phase. Now it’s the judges turn to have their
say!

  1. Abusing Flash-Proxies for client-side cross-domain HTTP requests
  2. Abusing HTTP Status Codes to Expose Private Information
  3. Autocomplete..again?!
  4. BEAST
  5. Bypassing Chrome’s Anti-XSS filter
  6. CAPTCHA Hax With TesserCap
  7. Cookiejacking
  8. CSRF: Flash + 307 redirect = Game Over
  9. DNS poisoning via Port Exhaustion
  10. DOMinator – Finding DOMXSS with dynamic taint propagation
  11. Expression Language Injection
  12. Java Applet Same-Origin Policy Bypass via HTTP Redirect
  13. JSON-based XSS exploitation
  14. Multiple vulnerabilities in Apache Struts2 and property oriented programming
    with Java
  15. Session Puzzling (aka Session Variable Overloading)

The Big List:

  1. Abusing Flash-Proxies for client-side cross-domain HTTP requests [slides]
  2. Abusing HTTP Status Codes to Expose Private Information
  3. Autocomplete..again?!
  4. BEAST
  5. Bypassing Chrome’s Anti-XSS filter
  6. Bypassing Flash’s local-with-filesystem Sandbox
  7. CAPTCHA Hax With TesserCap
  8. CSRF with JSON – leveraging XHR and CORS
  9. CSRF: Flash + 307 redirect = Game Over
  10. Close encounters of the third kind (client-side JavaScript vulnerabilities)
  11. Cookiejacking
  12. Cross domain content extraction with fake captcha
  13. Crowd-sourcing mischief on Google Maps leads customers astray
  14. DNS poisoning via Port Exhaustion
  15. DOMinator – Finding DOMXSS with dynamic taint propagation
  16. Double eval() for DOM based XSS
  17. Drag and Drop XSS in Firefox by HTML5 (Cross Domain in frames)
  18. Excel formula injection in Google Docs
  19. Exploitation of “Self-Only” Cross-Site Scripting in Google Code
  20. Exploiting the unexploitable XSS with clickjacking
  21. Expression Language Injection
  22. Facebook: Memorializing a User
  23. Filejacking: How to make a file server from your browser (with HTML5 of course)
  24. Google Chrome/ChromeOS sandbox side step via owning extensions
  25. HOW TO: Spy on the Webcams of Your Website Visitors
  26. Hidden XSS Attacking the Desktop & Mobile Platforms
  27. How To Own Every User On A Social Networking Site
  28. How to get SQL query contents from SQL injection flaw
  29. How to upload arbitrary file contents cross-domain (2)
  30. JSON-based XSS exploitation
  31. Java Applet Same-Origin Policy Bypass via HTTP Redirect
  32. Kindle Touch (5.0) Jailbreak/Root and SSH
  33. Launch any file path from web page
  34. Lotus Notes Formula Injection
  35. Multiple vulnerabilities in Apache Struts2 and property oriented programming
    with Java
  36. NULLs in entities in Firefox
  37. Rapid history extraction through non-destructive cache timing (v8)
  38. Session Puzzling (aka Session Variable Overloading) Video 1234
  39. SpyTunes: Find out what iTunes music someone else has
  40. Stealth Cookie Stealing (new XSS technique)
  41. Stripping Referrer for fun and profit
  42. SurveyMonkey: IP Spoofing
  43. Temporal Session Race Conditions Video 2
  44. Text-based CAPTCHA Strengths and Weaknesses
  45. The Failure of Noise-Based Non-Continuous Audio Captchas
  46. Timing Attacks on CSS Shaders
  47. Tracking users that block cookies with a HTTP redirect
  48. Using Cross-domain images in WebGL and Chrome 13
  49. XSS in Skype for iOS
  50. XSS-Track as a HTML5 WebSockets traffic sniffer
  51. HashDOS: Effective Denial of Service attacks against web application platforms

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