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Re: Insecure Ids - Need explanation
From: Reid Nichol (rnichol_rrc
yahoo.com)
Date: Mon Apr 17 2006 - 13:50:16 CDT
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Someone please correct me if I'm wrong.
How I would interpret this is, if you store login info in a cookie and
that login info can be guessed and the web app doesn't verify the login
info, then that's a problem.
e.g.
Say that the login id in a cookie is the user id. Say that this can be
guessed because the user id is just an auto increment field in the DB
and the web app doesn't keep track of who is logged in aside from
trusting that the cookies are authentic because they exist.
So, an attacker could create there own cookie and see which user id's
are good ones. Furthermore, the attacker could go through the valid
id's and see which ones have what access.
Now, if some of these users happen to have admin privileges, that would
be a rather large problem; the attacker just got him/her-self admin
privileges.
best regards,
Reid Nichol
--- susam_pal
yahoo.co.in wrote:
> This is an extract from OWASP.
>
> Insecure Id�s � Most web sites use some form of id, key, or index
as
> a way to reference users, roles, content, objects, or functions. If
> an attacker can guess these id�s, and the supplied values are not
> validated to ensure the are authorized for the current user, the
> attacker can exercise the access control scheme freely to see what
> they can access. Web applications should not rely on the secrecy of
> any id�s for protection.
>
> =================================================
> Can anyone please elaborate this part,
>
> "If an attacker can guess these id�s, and the supplied values are
not
> validated to ensure the are authorized for the current user, the
> attacker can exercise the access control scheme freely to see what
> they can access."
>
> I have never used such ids, indexes or keys when I developed
> authentication systems to reference users or roles. What kind of ids
> or keys are we talking about? How can an attacker use a guessed id?
>
>
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