Book Image

Bug Bounty Hunting Essentials

By : Carlos A. Lozano, Shahmeer Amir
Book Image

Bug Bounty Hunting Essentials

By: Carlos A. Lozano, Shahmeer Amir

Overview of this book

Bug bounty programs are the deals offered by prominent companies where-in any white-hat hacker can find bugs in the applications and they will have a recognition for the same. The number of prominent organizations having this program has increased gradually leading to a lot of opportunity for Ethical Hackers. This book will initially start with introducing you to the concept of Bug Bounty hunting. Then we will dig deeper into concepts of vulnerabilities and analysis such as HTML injection, CRLF injection and so on. Towards the end of the book, we will get hands-on experience working with different tools used for bug hunting and various blogs and communities to be followed. This book will get you started with bug bounty hunting and its fundamentals.
Table of Contents (20 chapters)
Title Page
Copyright and Credits
About Packt
Contributors
Preface
Index

Origins


The basic idea about why application-logic vulnerabilities happen is that the developers are following a specific paradigm when creating an application—and I am not talking about technology paradigms, I am saying that they are thinking in a specific way.

This means they take decisions in the code, and after processing them, they have a result. When they do that, they think about just the possible options they have from design. But, what happens if an external person, with different ideas, and outside of the paradigm, has other options? See the following diagram:

Due to this, different options were not thought of by the developers—it is an unexpected option, and it results in an error. Sometimes, these errors could crash the application, but in some cases, it could lead to a vulnerability.

What is the main problem?

When you are looking at cross-site scripting (XSS), SQL injection (SQLi), session management errors, or any other vulnerability described in this book, you are, quite simply...