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Bug Bounty Hunting Essentials

You're reading from   Bug Bounty Hunting Essentials Quick-paced guide to help white-hat hackers get through bug bounty programs

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Product type Paperback
Published in Nov 2018
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781788626897
Length 270 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Tools
Concepts
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Authors (2):
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Shahmeer Amir Shahmeer Amir
Author Profile Icon Shahmeer Amir
Shahmeer Amir
Carlos A. Lozano Carlos A. Lozano
Author Profile Icon Carlos A. Lozano
Carlos A. Lozano
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Table of Contents (15) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Basics of Bug Bounty Hunting FREE CHAPTER 2. How to Write a Bug Bounty Report 3. SQL Injection Vulnerabilities 4. Cross-Site Request Forgery 5. Application Logic Vulnerabilities 6. Cross-Site Scripting Attacks 7. SQL Injection 8. Open Redirect Vulnerabilities 9. Sub-Domain Takeovers 10. XML External Entity Vulnerability 11. Template Injection 12. Top Bug Bounty Hunting Tools 13. Top Learning Resources 14. Other Books You May Enjoy

Sub-domain takeovers in the wild


In the following sections, we will review some examples of reports about sub-domain takeovers.

Ubiquiti sub-domain takeovers

On February 6 2017, a bug bounty hunter called madrobot published a report about domain takeover in Ubiquiti.

madrobot discovered that one of Ubiquiti's subdomains was pointing to the following Google IP address:

216.58.203.243    moderator.ubnt.com216.58.203.243    ghs.google.com216.58.203.243    ghs.l.google.com

The DNS register for the sub-domain was illustrated in the follow-up evidence, as shown in the following screenshot:

So, when the user entered the sub-domain moderator.ubnt.com from the web browser, it showed Google's page instead, as shown in the following screenshot:

As we can see, any user can claim the sub-domain for themselves and use it to damage Ubiquiti.

Note

If you want to read more about this bug, visit the following link: https://hackerone.com/reports/181665.

Scan.me pointing to Zendesk

On February 16 2016, a security researcher...

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