XSS, adserving.cpxinteractive.com, Cross Site Scripting

XSs in Ad CDN Host adserving.cpxinteractive.com | Vulnerability Crawler Report

Report generated by Unforgivable Vulnerabilities, DORK Search, Exploit Research at Sun Jan 09 07:51:42 CST 2011.



DORK CWE-79 XSS Report

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1. Cross-site scripting (reflected)

2. Content type is not specified



1. Cross-site scripting (reflected)  next

Summary

Severity:   High
Confidence:   Certain
Host:   http://adserving.cpxinteractive.com
Path:   /st

Issue detail

The name of an arbitrarily supplied request parameter is copied into a JavaScript string which is encapsulated in double quotation marks. The payload 645a9"-alert(1)-"c8cb9b7364 was submitted in the name of an arbitrarily supplied request parameter. This input was echoed unmodified in the application's response.

This proof-of-concept attack demonstrates that it is possible to inject arbitrary JavaScript into the application's response.

Remediation detail

Echoing user-controllable data within a script context is inherently dangerous and can make XSS attacks difficult to prevent. If at all possible, the application should avoid echoing user data within this context.

Issue background

Reflected cross-site scripting vulnerabilities arise when data is copied from a request and echoed into the application's immediate response in an unsafe way. An attacker can use the vulnerability to construct a request which, if issued by another application user, will cause JavaScript code supplied by the attacker to execute within the user's browser in the context of that user's session with the application.

The attacker-supplied code can perform a wide variety of actions, such as stealing the victim's session token or login credentials, performing arbitrary actions on the victim's behalf, and logging their keystrokes.

Users can be induced to issue the attacker's crafted request in various ways. For example, the attacker can send a victim a link containing a malicious URL in an email or instant message. They can submit the link to popular web sites that allow content authoring, for example in blog comments. And they can create an innocuous looking web site which causes anyone viewing it to make arbitrary cross-domain requests to the vulnerable application (using either the GET or the POST method).

The security impact of cross-site scripting vulnerabilities is dependent upon the nature of the vulnerable application, the kinds of data and functionality which it contains, and the other applications which belong to the same domain and organisation. If the application is used only to display non-sensitive public content, with no authentication or access control functionality, then a cross-site scripting flaw may be considered low risk. However, if the same application resides on a domain which can access cookies for other more security-critical applications, then the vulnerability could be used to attack those other applications, and so may be considered high risk. Similarly, if the organisation which owns the application is a likely target for phishing attacks, then the vulnerability could be leveraged to lend credibility to such attacks, by injecting Trojan functionality into the vulnerable application, and exploiting users' trust in the organisation in order to capture credentials for other applications which it owns. In many kinds of application, such as those providing online banking functionality, cross-site scripting should always be considered high risk.

Remediation background

In most situations where user-controllable data is copied into application responses, cross-site scripting attacks can be prevented using two layers of defenses:In cases where the application's functionality allows users to author content using a restricted subset of HTML tags and attributes (for example, blog comments which allow limited formatting and linking), it is necessary to parse the supplied HTML to validate that it does not use any dangerous syntax; this is a non-trivial task.

Request

GET /st?ad_type=ad&ad_size=728x90&section=628381\&645a9"-alert(1)-"c8cb9b7364=1 HTTP/1.1
Host: adserving.cpxinteractive.com
Accept: */*
Accept-Language: en
User-Agent: Mozilla/4.0 (compatible; MSIE 7.0; Windows NT 6.0)
Connection: close

Response

HTTP/1.1 200 OK
Date: Sun, 09 Jan 2011 02:03:52 GMT
Server: YTS/1.18.4
P3P: policyref="/w3c/p3p.xml", CP="NOI DSP COR NID CURa ADMa DEVa PSAa PSDa OUR BUS COM INT OTC PUR STA"
Cache-Control: no-store
Last-Modified: Sun, 09 Jan 2011 02:03:52 GMT
Pragma: no-cache
Content-Length: 4334
Age: 0
Connection: close

/* All portions of this software are copyright (c) 2003-2006 Right Media*/var rm_ban_flash=0;var rm_url="";var rm_pop_frequency=0;var rm_pop_id=0;var rm_pop_times=0;var rm_pop_nofreqcap=0;var rm_passback=0;var rm_tag_type="";rm_tag_type = "ad"; rm_url = "http://adserving.cpxinteractive.com/imp?645a9"-alert(1)-"c8cb9b7364=1&Z=728x90&s=628381%5c&_salt=3434864609";var RM_POP_COOKIE_NAME='ym_pop_freq';var RM_INT_COOKIE_NAME='ym_int_freq';if(!window.rm_crex_data){rm_crex_data=new Array();}if(rm_passback==0){rm_pb_data=new
...[SNIP]...

2. Content type is not specified  previous

Summary

Severity:   Information
Confidence:   Certain
Host:   http://adserving.cpxinteractive.com
Path:   /st

Issue description

If a web response does not specify a content type, then the browser will usually analyse the response and attempt to determine the MIME type of its content. This can have unexpected results, and if the content contains any user-controllable data may lead to cross-site scripting or other client-side vulnerabilities.

In most cases, the absence of a content type statement does not constitute a security flaw, particularly if the response contains static content. You should review the contents of the response and the context in which it appears to determine whether any vulnerability exists.

Issue remediation

For every response containing a message body, the application should include a single Content-type header which correctly and unambiguously states the MIME type of the content in the response body.

Request

GET /st?ad_type=ad&ad_size=728x90&section=628381 HTTP/1.1
Host: adserving.cpxinteractive.com
Proxy-Connection: keep-alive
Referer: http://www.pogo.com/oberon/navheader.jsp?site=pogo&ifw=756&pageSection=header_downloads_store&ifh=210&lkey=x&top=http%3A//download-games.pogo.com/AllGames.aspx%3Frefid%3Dheadernav_fp_shopmenu&pageSection=header_downloads_store
Accept: */*
User-Agent: Mozilla/5.0 (Windows; U; Windows NT 6.1; en-US) AppleWebKit/534.10 (KHTML, like Gecko) Chrome/8.0.552.224 Safari/534.10
Accept-Encoding: gzip,deflate,sdch
Accept-Language: en-US,en;q=0.8
Accept-Charset: ISO-8859-1,utf-8;q=0.7,*;q=0.3

Response

HTTP/1.1 200 OK
Date: Sun, 09 Jan 2011 01:28:47 GMT
Server: YTS/1.18.4
P3P: policyref="/w3c/p3p.xml", CP="NOI DSP COR NID CURa ADMa DEVa PSAa PSDa OUR BUS COM INT OTC PUR STA"
Cache-Control: no-store
Last-Modified: Sun, 09 Jan 2011 01:28:47 GMT
Pragma: no-cache
Content-Length: 4301
Age: 0
Proxy-Connection: close

/* All portions of this software are copyright (c) 2003-2006 Right Media*/var rm_ban_flash=0;var rm_url="";var rm_pop_frequency=0;var rm_pop_id=0;var rm_pop_times=0;var rm_pop_nofreqcap=0;var rm_passb
...[SNIP]...

Report generated by Unforgivable Vulnerabilities, DORK Search, Exploit Research at Sun Jan 09 07:51:42 CST 2011.