The only thing I know about phones is that I don't know anything. Oh... one more thing: if you backfeed a 220v generator into one of those roadside boxes full of punch-down blocks, the police come. And they take your generator.
hmm, good point... still, if the hacker acquired all the user's cookies and the user logs in before the hacker can use those cookies, wouldn't the same happen? You get notified of a hack that happened, even though the hacker didn't get in?
I was working on some data parsing code while I came across the following.
$line = "100 something is amazingly cool";
$key = 100;
var_dump($line == $key);
Well most of us would expect the dump to produce a false, but to my surprise the dump was a true!
I do understand that in PHP there is t...
> One possible solution to this problem is to treat the presentation of an invalid login cookie as evidence of a previously successful attack. The site could then present an impossible to miss security warning and automatically invalidate all of the user's remembered login sessions. This approach would create a denial of service attack: since usernames are easy to come by or guess, an attacker could submit invalid login cookies for every user and thus disable the entire system.
wait, actually not. that cookie is still invalidated as soon as the actual user logs in normally, right? So is the token only disabled to prevent the case where the user does not log in right away?
Ah, then my initial thought process was actually right, i just forgot about the tiny little problem of a completely compromised database or stupid users :)
@webarto The URL is unimportant. Any non-existant page can be used, as long as the domain is valid and there is an .htaccess file on the server, specifying a 404 error doc. If you need something to test, you can give this a whirl --> macombcountydentaloffice.com/fakepage.html
@webarto This is a server I've worked on so, I can confirm this site is using htaccess and is on Apache. I'm not trying to get the HTML. I'm trying to obtain the URL of the page that's being served as the 404 page
@Lusitanian I don't really get it. I had to change the path param for the request to implement The UriInterface to prevent it bitching about not being able to get the baseuri, But besides that it works for me
@Batfan That doesn't sound hard thing to do. If you have the 404 page, you can compare, if you don't have it, you can try non existing URL and check if return is servers default 404 page, or something yours, etc. Not really sure what you want (exactly).
> Fatal error: Uncaught exception 'OAuth\Common\Http\Exception\TokenResponseException' with message 'file_get_contents(accounts.google.com/o/oauth2/token): failed to open stream: HTTP request failed! HTTP/1.1 400 Bad Request
@webarto Unfortunately, this needs to work on a number of different sites (different content), all of which use the homepage for their 404 (not my choice).
@webarto Sounds like my only option is to grab the full code from both pages and compare them, before returning a result
@Batfan Fetch the homepage and some 404 URL, yup... although that could be a mess, because of HTML. You might want to extract some index page specific part, and compare it to 404.