Cross Site Scripting
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A Web Developer's Guide to Cross-SiteScripting
Cross-site scripting attacks are those in which attackers inject malicious code,<br />usually client-side scripts, into web applications from outside sources. Because<br />of the number of possible injection locations and techniques, ...
Cross Site Scripting (XSS) FAQ
XSS vulnerabilities have been found in all sorts of websites including fbi.gov, yahoo.com, ebay.com and many other popular and important websites. This paper details XSS attacks and hopes to educate you on what they are, how attackers use them and of...
Cross-Sight ScriptingVulnerabilities
Cross-sight scripting is a vulnerability that is a potential threat to most Web servers and browsers. It is not a product specific attack. Servers that embed browser input into dynamically generated HTML pages can be manipulated into becoming a launc...
Cross-Site Tracing - Protecting Businesses from a Simple Attack
One of the newest published cross-site scripting attacks (XSS), cross-site tracing (XST) bypasses any security mechanism put into place by a developer and enables an attacker to gain access to an individual's cookies and authentication credential...
Using The WinBatch Scripting Language To Automate Security In An NT4 Environment
A basic scripting knowledge is the Swiss Army knife of any administrator's repertoire. The use of scripting can enable the automation of virtually any repetitive task. For any security administrator working on a network with more that one server,...
XSS, Cookies, and Session ID Authentication - Three Ingredients for a Successful Hack
Seth Fogie looks at a real-life XSS attack and how it was used to bypass the authentication scheme of an online web application, leading to "shell" access to the web server.
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