Book Image

Hands-On Bug Hunting for Penetration Testers

By : Joe Marshall, Himanshu Sharma
Book Image

Hands-On Bug Hunting for Penetration Testers

By: Joe Marshall, Himanshu Sharma

Overview of this book

Bug bounties have quickly become a critical part of the security economy. This book shows you how technical professionals with an interest in security can begin productively—and profitably—participating in bug bounty programs. You will learn about SQli, NoSQLi, XSS, XXE, and other forms of code injection. You’ll see how to create CSRF PoC HTML snippets, how to discover hidden content (and what to do with it once it’s found), and how to create the tools for automated pentesting work?ows. Then, you’ll format all of this information within the context of a bug report that will have the greatest chance of earning you cash. With detailed walkthroughs that cover discovering, testing, and reporting vulnerabilities, this book is ideal for aspiring security professionals. You should come away from this work with the skills you need to not only find the bugs you're looking for, but also the best bug bounty programs to participate in, and how to grow your skills moving forward in freelance security research.
Table of Contents (16 chapters)

Unsanitized Data – An XSS Case Study

Cross-Site Scripting (XSS) is a vulnerability caused by exceptions built into the browser's same-origin policy restricting how assets (images, style sheets, and JavaScript) are loaded from external sources.

Consistently appearing in the OWASP Top-10 survey of web-application vulnerabilities, XSS has the potential to be a very damaging, persistent exploit that affects large sections of the target site's user base. It can also be difficult to stamp out, especially in sites that have large attack surfaces, with many form inputs, logins, discussion threads, and so on, to secure.

This chapter will cover the browser mechanisms that create the opportunity for XSS, the different varieties of XSS (persistent, reflected, DOM-based, and so on), how to test for it, and a full example of an XSS vulnerability from discovering...