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Mastering Modern Web Penetration Testing

You're reading from   Mastering Modern Web Penetration Testing Master the art of conducting modern pen testing attacks and techniques on your web application before the hacker does!

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Product type Paperback
Published in Oct 2016
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781785284588
Length 298 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Authors (2):
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Prakhar Prasad Prakhar Prasad
Author Profile Icon Prakhar Prasad
Prakhar Prasad
Rafay Baloch Rafay Baloch
Author Profile Icon Rafay Baloch
Rafay Baloch
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Toc

Table of Contents (13) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Common Security Protocols FREE CHAPTER 2. Information Gathering 3. Cross-Site Scripting 4. Cross-Site Request Forgery 5. Exploiting SQL Injection 6. File Upload Vulnerabilities 7. Metasploit and Web 8. XML Attacks 9. Emerging Attack Vectors 10. OAuth 2.0 Security 11. API Testing Methodology Index

Exploiting OAuth for fun and profit


Now that we've learned about different OAuth mechanisms, let's go straight to exploitation techniques.

Open redirect – the malformed URL

Let's say we're doing a phishing/client-side browser exploitation as a part of a penetration test engagement for an organization. Our exploit page is located at http://exploit.example.com/ and they really trust some known websites. In this example, we consider a trusted website to be http://trusted.com.

Simply speaking, if we give the exploit link directly to the users, they may not click it, but a www.trusted.com link will have better chances of getting a hit. That's what open-redirect is all about; redirecting the user from www.trusted.com to exploit.example.com will perform our trick and at the same time exploit the users' trust.

In OAuth 2.0, some authorization servers suffer from a flaw that indirectly results in an open redirect. Let's assume that www.trusted.com runs an OAuth 2.0 authorization server at http://api...

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