Past Saturday, I conducted a "Webcast" on "Garage4hackers" on one of my favorite subjects in the field of Information Security i.e. "WAF Bypass". Initially, i had decided to present something on the topic of "Mobile Browser Security" due to the fact that this has been a topic I have been recently conducting a research on.
However i later realized that the "TakeAways" would not be much helpful, therefore i decided to talk about something that Bughunters/Pentesters can use in their day to day pentests and security engagements and hence i decided to present on this topic.
I must admit that the response has been overwhelming along with it, i have also managed to get a chance to learn more from the feedback and CTF responses.
I would like to specially thank "Imdadullah", "Himanshu", "Sandeep" along with other garage4hackers members for inviting/supporting me through out the journey. One of the best things "G4H Community" is the work they are doing for the security community by conducting free of cost Webcasts. You can find a list of other Webcasts here - "http://www.garage4hackers.com/ranchoddas/"
Abstract
While WAF's may help preventing application layer attacks up to some extent, however they certainly are not replacements for input validation and secure coding practices due to the fact that they are based upon Blacklists which means rejection of known patterns while allowing everything else. The problem, especially in case of JavaScript is that it's simply not possible to create blacklists capable of blocking all patterns without having to generate false positives due to the dynamic nature of javaScript and infinite ways of obfuscating the payload.
In this webinar, the we will talk about various techniques that can be used to bypass WAF"s such as Brute Forcing, Regular expression reversing and browser bugs. The webinar would mostly discuss
Prerequisite
- Basic knowledge about HTML/JavaScript
- Basic know how about XSS attacks
CTF Competition
After the webinar, we had this "CTF" challenge made up by a friend of mine "FileDescriptor", certain parts the first two challenges are based upon characteristics of a real world WAF that I encountered in wild which was combined with FD's ideas to make up the challenge . The last challenge is based upon "@FileDescriptor" unqiue idea and hence, it's not easy to crack and hence we named it as "Hard".
CTF Link :http://92.222.71.224
Bypassing Modern WAF's Exemplified At XSS (Webcast)
Reviewed by AC10 Tech
on
Tuesday, May 03, 2016
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