OSEC

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From: http-equivexcite.com
Date: Wed May 01 2002 - 11:34:47 CDT

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    Wednesday, May 01, 2002

    The following represents a classic [fitting] working example of the
    dangers of Cross Site Scripting.

    [see: http://www.cert.org/advisories/CA-2000-02.html
    http://www.cert.org/archive/pdf/cross_site_scripting.pdf]

    Gibson Research Corporation http://www.grc.com is an interesting site
    covering a wide variety of security topics for newcomers. Cursory
    research suggests that it enjoys a substantial loyal following who
    trust it implicitly.

    The problem is two-fold:

    1. The site has a web based discussion forum
    2. The site has a custom 'filter', the so-called: "Gibson Research
    Corporation's IIS Advanced Prophylactic Filter"

    This custom 'filter' is supposed to protect the server
    from 'malicious abuse' and both 'detect and block' invalid requests
    submitted to the server:

    http://www.grc.com/apf/

    [screen shot: http://www.malware.com/flitty.png 25KB]

    Unfortunately, what it actually does is allow us to inject our own
    html code through grc.com's secured server. This is particularly
    ticklish as it does not take much to conjure up a scenario where we
    construct a 'fake' e-commerce page, say peddling a book or 'gadget'
    download and simply invite the loyal following to go and submit their
    credit card details to our custom form.

    The site grc.com well known and trusted. The page is on a secured
    server with valid certificates.

    Ripe For Picking™

    Crude Working example:

    note: custom crafted for Internet Explorer 5.5 and 6

    http://www.malware.com/grc.html

    [screen shot: http://www.malware.com/lucre.png 11KB]

    Notes:

    1. Watch where you "point and click". It's all smoke and mirrors out
    there.
    2. 3 mail messages within 72 hours to support grc.com remain
    unanswered to date.

    End Call

    --
    http://www.malware.com