After Cross Site Scripting (XSS), the second most common web application security exploit is probably one you haven’t heard of: Cross Site Request Forgery (or CSRF for short). This little-known but ...
Cross-site request forgery (CSRF) attacks are becoming a more common attack method used by hackers. These attacks take advantage of the trust a website has for a user’s input and browser. The victim ...
While they may not pack the same punch or crop up at the same frequency as injection or cross site scripting attacks, cross site request forgery (CSRF) attacks should still be very much on the radar ...
Glassdoor, a website for job hunting and posting anonymous company reviews, has resolved a critical issue that could be exploited to take over accounts. Bug bounty researcher "Tabahi" (ta8ahi) found ...
Researchers from Princeton University today revealed their discovery of four major Websites susceptible to the silent-but-deadly cross-site request forgery (CSRF) attack -- including one on ...
The computer security industry has made many positive changes since the early days of computing. One thing that seems to be catching on with bigger tech companies is bug bounty programs. PayPal offers ...
Security researcher Petko Petkov has revealed a cross-site request forgery vulnerability in Gmail that makes it possible for a malicious web site to surreptitiously add a filter to a user's Gmail ...
If you're worried about CSRF (Cross-Site Request Forgery) attacks (and you probably should be), then you've already added the code to your Views that adds an anti-forgery token to the data that the ...
The United States Government National Vulnerability Database (NVD) published an advisory about a vulnerability discovered in the WP Statistics WordPress plugin that affects up to 600,000 active ...
GoDaddy has patched a cross-site request forgery (CSRF) vulnerability that would allow hackers to take over domains registered with the domain registration company. Security researcher Dylan ...