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Attacking and Exploiting Modern Web Applications

Attacking and Exploiting Modern Web Applications

By : Simone Onofri, Onofri
4.9 (14)
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Attacking and Exploiting Modern Web Applications

Attacking and Exploiting Modern Web Applications

4.9 (14)
By: Simone Onofri, Onofri

Overview of this book

Web attacks and exploits pose an ongoing threat to the interconnected world. This comprehensive book explores the latest challenges in web application security, providing you with an in-depth understanding of hackers' methods and the practical knowledge and skills needed to effectively understand web attacks. The book starts by emphasizing the importance of mindset and toolset in conducting successful web attacks. You’ll then explore the methodologies and frameworks used in these attacks, and learn how to configure the environment using interception proxies, automate tasks with Bash and Python, and set up a research lab. As you advance through the book, you’ll discover how to attack the SAML authentication layer; attack front-facing web applications by learning WordPress and SQL injection, and exploit vulnerabilities in IoT devices, such as command injection, by going through three CTFs and learning about the discovery of seven CVEs. Each chapter analyzes confirmed cases of exploitation mapped with MITRE ATT&CK. You’ll also analyze attacks on Electron JavaScript-based applications, such as XSS and RCE, and the security challenges of auditing and exploiting Ethereum smart contracts written in Solidity. Finally, you’ll find out how to disclose vulnerabilities. By the end of this book, you’ll have enhanced your ability to find and exploit web vulnerabilities.
Table of Contents (14 chapters)
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1
Part 1: Attack Preparation
4
Part 2: Evergreen Attacks
8
Part 3: Novel Attacks

Technical requirements

You can use the Ubuntu LTS machine configured in Chapter 2 in this chapter. In addition, we will use Ghidra for reverse engineering and QEMU for emulation. We will install it in the Emulation section of this chapter, as well as a few other tools.

Ghidra

Ghidra is a versatile software reverse engineering tool developed by the National Security Agency Research Directorate. It offers numerous features, including disassembly, assembly, decompilation, graphing, and scripting. It supports a broad range of processor instruction sets and executable formats and is designed for both interactive and automated – Java or Python – usage.

To install Ghidra, please follow the website’s instructions [2].

Physical device

The physical GL.iNet 300M Mini Smart Router device, GL-AR300M16 [3], with firmware version 3.215 (the latest at the time of writing), is also recommended for the dynamic analysis part. However, we will explain how to emulate...

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