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21:00
then don't
@tereško I think so, it's using prepare and execute, however that doesn't necessarily mean it's protected...
@WesStark I'm not an accountant. But I've heard this line both anecdotally and first-hand, several times.
21:17
@DaveRandom I can barely read "We didn't put up a paywall" through the paywall on that page you linked.
@Allenph I'm not sure if that's the "test" or if that's their "we detect an ad blocker, you can't read this..."
Huh.
@DaveRandom I have a habit of killing jokes
tbf it's not a great joke
21:21
I looked at it here in Utah with my polarized glasses for a second. Dumb idea.
ugh my twatter feed is full of pictures of trump being a bell end, as if that's in some way remarkable
Spots and it feels a little like when I burned my retinas climbing at high altitudes in Colorado.
@Allenph coworker gave me his pair of glasses cause he was afraid they were fakes. They worked pretty good for me.
Very dumb of me.
My coworkers had glasses...I just didn't know at the time.
ahhhh
21:23
I used a ~13 stop ND filter
our student life guy was also giving them out, had a whole bunch of them
I used an internet
just an internet? you know what happens when you consume one whole internet?
I think it's funny people think this is some huge scientific thing.
As far as I know you can do this quite easily in a few ways.
And they have telescopes which are made for exactly the purpose of seeing the corona.
the last total eclipse was back in 1979, so astro-scientists are pretty excited about this eclipse because technology has improved since then
but it's not the first solar eclipse to pass over the US and won't be the last, partial or total
@PaulCrovella exactly.
something about wanting to study coronas and not being able to accurately during every other time
As far as scientists are concerned I see 0 difference between the eclipse and this...
A coronagraph is a telescopic attachment designed to block out the direct light from a star so that nearby objects – which otherwise would be hidden in the star's bright glare – can be resolved. Most coronagraphs are intended to view the corona of the Sun, but a new class of conceptually similar instruments (called stellar coronagraphs to distinguish them from solar coronagraphs) are being used to find extrasolar planets and circumstellar disks around nearby stars. == InventionEdit == The coronagraph was introduced in 1931 by the French astronomer Bernard Lyot; since then, coronagraphs have been...
Well other than refraction of light on the atmosphere...but I'm sure they have a telescope in space with a coronagraph.
21:27
shrug, article I read didn't make a comparison
user924016
hmm @PeeHaa you thaa
@RonniSkansing yo
user924016
so I tested out that <img src="deceptive-phish-marked-site" /> and its great fun
user924016
like in places such as comment and reviews
Yeap :)
@RonniSkansing Also remember sites that do POST actions using GET without csrf protection? Guess what! header('Location: http://site.com/do-the-action-on-behalf-of-the-user'); \o/
It's such a nice vector
@RonniSkansing Attacking it from the other side (the source) is even better
user924016
21:39
yea
If you can manage to get e.g. imgur marked as crap you have fun++
Which should be possible rather easily I think
user924016
Last bug I disclosed to imgur took too long to be handled so Im not very interested at beating at that again
That prevents you from manually adding images to sites yourself and take on the web at once :)
@RonniSkansing Even better. Break the web without a fast resolve
user924016
I sent a bug report to php today on a small issue =p
@PeeHaa Where did you see that?
That's a pretty gnarly one. Haha.
21:45
@Allenph Where did I see what?
POST as GET + CSRF.
@PeeHaa Do you know why you suck?
@Fabor If I have to guess I would say it involves steam :P
Correct
@Allenph It's as old as the web :)
We used to everybody out from forums using a /logout redirect for shits and giggles
@Fabor You clearly don't bug me enough about it
21:48
lol
So blame yourself
Noted
:-)
@PeeHaa I always run my logout calls as a GET.
Without csrf protection?
21:49
No.
user924016
if you missing csrf on login + logout
I use JWTs with an SPA.
Negates most CSRF.
user924016
I can do logout => csrf login attacks + detect if I hit the correct credentials
what is an csrf login attack? How does csrf relate to the login?
user924016
its a bruteforce attack on a login on behalf of the victim
21:50
Why would you care about csrf in that case?
You are going to have the credentials anyway :P
user924016
because you can do the attack on behalf of the client
Or is it about masking the origin?
user924016
like lets say your router
@RonniSkansing From the client's location / machine you mean
user924016
yes
21:51
yeah i see
@RonniSkansing That seems very unlikely to be successful still.
user924016
so you visit bad site, bad site makes 100 iframes with srcdoc= <form = ..
If you're banking on 1 client...you're unlikely to hit their password.
user924016
oh it is likely to succeseed
The best way now is with rainbows of the most common 100 passwords and a bunch of usernames.
21:52
yeah everybody uses a password manager :P
Right?
user924016
I do
yeah we do
If you salt and hash correctly...it's almost impossible.
But not people
:)
user924016
@Allenph has nothing to do with hash and salt (=
21:53
Then I'm missing something here.
@Allenph You brute force the actual password
user924016
via http, inside the firewall
It's either you login or not
Oh, I see.
user924016
well you cant get the response code from the post requests inside the iframes
21:53
You're inside the tunnel at this point and you can see their request headers.
user924016
but you can do another request to see if the login address redirects
user924016
or count the frames on a logged in site with a specific amount of frames logged in vs not
user924016
I actually thought that was a sop bypass (bugs.chromium.org/p/chromium/issues/detail?id=752190) but was wrong
When I went to work at my last company they had a login form over HTTPS with plaintext in GET variables.
It was insane.
@RonniSkansing "Working as intended" will only get worse imo when the specs are getting more and more retarded / people keep cramming more weird stuff in it
user924016
22:04
(=
user924016
have you tried.. Brave?
Hello guys!
user924016
Hello mr pop
how are you ronni ?
user924016
I am great
22:06
lies
user924016
Are you from India?
that is good!
haha @DaveRandom
are there any rules for the chat? It is my first time to join a room.
@RonniSkansing I haven't because I assumed there is a marketing firm behind it
user924016
awesome question
user924016
22:07
Alright bro, thanks!
brb bathroom
user924016
@PeeHaa I dunno, I think you are right, something like that, money making thing
Yeah. I often smell firms like that as I have worked for them :P
No matter what they are saying I do not trust any of them :D
@RonniSkansing Run that attack by me one more time.
I stared at the sun for like 5 seconds max and now all my code has been transpiled to PHP. Stay safe out there.
2
hahahahaha
user924016
22:09
@Allenph did you read the google bug report I send on reading the frame count cross frame?
Didn't see the link. #brb
You're correct.
user924016
from that you should gather that there are ways to (other that this also) to poll if a user is logged into a service. If the same service does not have csrf protection on both login and login. It is possible to do a bidirectional csrf attack. Meaning that a victim hits a bad site, they will logout of their service, and start doing login attempts at x site. A successful hit can be polled via methods as mentioned before.
user924016
it's weird stuff but helps you appreciate small thing like putting a csrf token on login and logout
user924016
and understanding how a simple issue like logout csrf can lead to bigger issues
@RonniSkansing I like those cascading clusterfucks
user924016
22:12
btw also other attacks can be played out like this, it was just an example
I am back!
user924016
@PeeHaa yea they are fun
what is everyone doing?
breathing
user924016
looking for something to test a bit on
22:18
haha
anyone up to coding?
@RonniSkansing Ahhh, I see.
Wait...actually I don't.
guys who wants to see a funny video?
user924016
@Allenph which part (=
user924016
@MrProPop sure I do
22:25
@RonniSkansing Your prey shoots off a request to your malicious website...is there some kind of proxy there?
user924016
seen it
tfw you start a script that aggressively deletes things and you can't see the output
user924016
@Allenph the victim could shoots out requests to their router for example
user924016
@DaveRandom love it
user924016
22:26
i would panic and kill it
not keen
I don't see how you would get those requests.
I'm missing something.
haha yeah I like it too
user924016
@DaveRandom that feeling of "this is taking too long"
@DaveRandom I always kill it at least once to check
user924016
22:26
@Allenph how you do the csrf post requests or polling if they successed?
Yeh it's recursively walking a huuuuuuuge directory tre and cleaning out any file thats >1wk old
I already gave it some very small branches and it works fine
still, not a pleasant feeling when you point it at the base
Is that really a lot of code?
no it's like 10 lines
more complex because of some fancy-ass arg parsing, but not a lot
Maybe build a new file type with TTLs :P
Call it "BondMessages"
Or wait, it's MIMessages
I'd need to build some new users for that, this is a dir where users are dumping "temp" files and never deleting them
22:28
w/e the exploding message films are
it's starting to cause problems, and turns out to be a big part of the reason exchange fell over this morning
@RonniSkansing A simple example is me sending you to a redirect which goes to /logout.
@DaveRandom if you somehow care about it, you could instead move these files to another dir altogether, backup the folder, and rm -rf folder &
@DaveRandom What's in the files that are being deleted?
I still don't see how that helps you...They would try and log back in, but you can't see their headers.
user924016
22:30
@Allenph yea
@FlorianMargaine yeh I considered that also, although more as a sanity check than anything else, in the end I landed on "fuck it, it works"
user924016
so victim lands on your page
@DaveRandom Someone had an awesome monday...
VSS will save me if I royally screw it up anyway
@PeeHaa you have no idea :-P
I could tell if they logged in by inserting some JS at the end of the page and polling window.length.
user924016
22:30
you make one iframe with a srcdoc= <form .. logout> .. <script> ..querySelector("iframe1").click();
But what good does that do?
user924016
that one logs the user out
user924016
they are still on the evil domain
Did you at least get exchange up again fastish? @DaveRandom
user924016
now it adds a new iframe again with src doc <form .. login attempt 1> .. <script> ..querySelector("iframe2").click();
user924016
22:31
the victim is still on the evil domain
user924016
now it does a poll to see if the user is logged in
user924016
if it fails it repeats, set in a new iframe src doc = form ...
user924016
catch the drift?
22:33
heh
@RonniSkansing I don't see why you need the iFrames.
When's the next major solar event so I can start planning yolks.
user924016
@Allenph because you want to do POST requests without redirecting the user away
Couldn't you just make your proxy use AJAX instead?
user924016
no
user924016
22:34
because of SOP
live update https://t.co/gbVQdFPgsr
in JavaScript, 2 hours ago, by rlemon
@KendallFrey https://i.imgur.com/6J9Fapn.png
in JavaScript, 2 hours ago, by rlemon
Zoom in. ISS
@RonniSkansing Ahhhhhh.
user924016
you cant do a ajax request to another domain unless it replies with allowed headers
not sure if the pic is real, but real nice if it is
22:35
God I am tired of hearing people use the word "disrupt".
@PeeHaa yes, by truncating a 230GB (!!!) SQL log file
@FlorianMargaine Damn
That's so cool
@DaveRandom lol
turns out the people who "administer" that server don't do it very well...
I can see that :P
anyway I'm going to go full rockstar and leave my deletion script running and go to bed
nn
user924016
22:36
yea sleep tight
night o/
and light
^^
@RonniSkansing So I make a frame which leads to /logout...the user tries to login again...I'm listening. When they click submit I poll windows.length and if I know the count of the iframes I've opened and that behind the portal is an iframe I can see which credentials are the correct ones?
I feel like I've got this very wrong, but.
user924016
yea (=
user924016
so the user does no interaction
user924016
22:37
they might be intertained by a video
user924016
on some illegal series streaming site with cheap invasive ads
user924016
I do understand this can be a bit complicated
Wait...so you're not listening to the credentials they're sending.
You're just brute-forcing on their behalf.
user924016
no, I am sending credentials on behalf of them
user924016
yes
22:39
That seems unlikely to succeed?
@DaveRandom You hear about Big Ben?
user924016
likely to successed if planned right
So you snagged some user.
user924016
like fingerprinting the router by looking available img files
user924016
do brute on default credentials and weak
22:40
Oh...
user924016
change router settings
I see.
This is a shotgun approach.
user924016
its mostly a really specific approach
user924016
like you know the victim, their email, the service etc
Then unlikely to succeed. o.O
Say my application has this vulnerability.
user924016
22:41
yea
Then say I am over HTTPS. The hash doesn't matter because you're coming from the front...not the back.
You can't MIM.
Which means you'
user924016
sure I can
re guessing.
user924016
yes
user924016
I am not sniffing the credentials, its not a phishing attack
22:43
If you're hitting a single client on a specific service...you're super unlikely to catch a break.
The only way would be to know the usernames of like a thousand users and convince them all to go to that link.
And then one of them might have one of the top 100 most common passwords.
Not to mention, on my APIs I 403 your request for X seconds after X amount of tries.
@PaulCrovella You little shit.
user924016
lol
user924016
@Allenph I woudnt underestimate it
@RonniSkansing I just thought this was like a gnarly one and I didn't see it.
22:46
@Allenph see how easy it is? :p
@PaulCrovella Yes. But this is a problem for the user, not so much the developer.
user924016
@Allenph dont allow csrf on login
This seems like it would work very well on large services like Facebook or Netflix where you could collect a lot of victims...but not on like some company's stocking website.
@RonniSkansing Well, you shouldn't anywhere.
"stupidest feature implementation in a software" contender: in vlc if you add a folder to a playlist with random playback it has the same chances to get played as music files. for example if you have 99 files and 1 folder containing 1000 files, each of those 1000 files will have 1 out of 100 chances to get played, rather than 1 out of 1099
user924016
@Allenph for example you can distribute a single attack on a user on a chain of users
user924016
22:51
so lets say I expose a XSS or spam to 100k users and they all make brute attempts on a single user (ofc the service doesnt throttle either on single user but ip)
@PeeHaa what music player do you use on windows?
user924016
xamp. he uses xamp
@WesStark foobar2000
@RonniSkansing hehehe
i used that to edit the tags, didn't actually consider it a player :P
user924016
and if the they lock down the account on too many attempts, the user would be logged out forever
user924016
22:54
with a couple of xss on random low traffic sites
I still use winamp
me too lol
@WesStark It plays music files no?
Sounds like a player to me :D
can you randomize playlists? drag drop music?
Idunno
yes
22:55
winamp still rules tho
vlc sucks ass
I like tiny and fast applications
winamp is tiny
It has a fucking browser in it :P
you can kill it
or at least it had when I had it 10 years ago
Nobody is ever going to convince me to move from foobar.
22:57
i would try to use media player classic but i have some problems with the audio codec. sounds distorted
@PeeHaa says the guy who also uses chrome and phpstorm
I am just waiting for the moment the devs start fucking it up as they all do
there's some gain filter enabled but i cannot find it. tried to reinstall but nothing changed
@PaulCrovella I like fast cars but I drive a fucking astra
:P
I've never even heard of an astra
22:58
See! That's how bad it is
@RonniSkansing Oh...I see.
That's a much better strategy.
@PeeHaa get a japanese sportscar like the toyota 86 or bubbbaru brz
I want / need to get a proper car at some point. But I had to buy a cheap car quick because the previous one didn't feel like driving anymore
So I will just drive around on this thing until it breaks :P
I kinda want a bmw again still
user924016
get a job =p
23:06
The Vauxhall Astra - for those that need a car but can't be bothered to learn anything about cars before purchasing one.
meh bmw
why a bmw when you can have this now for the same price
more horsepower, ferrari engine
@WesStark I don't know if I could live with that front end…
@RonniSkansing :D
23:07
if i had money to waste i'd buy it
@WesStark yes both those tend to break by looking at them
it's been out for a while now and seems ok
made by ferrari, maserati, alfa and abarth. all good stuff
alfa is not good stuff :P
C'mon
I know you have to say it because you are italian
:D
alfa used to be good stuff
It did. Seems they're trying to recapture that.
23:09
also maserati used to be crap, now it's not
> fatal: refusing to merge unrelated histories
Oh boy
How the fuck does that even happen...
what did you do
I think I did: git init, add github remote, push, commit more stuff
No idea besides that
more stuff
yeah as in git add foo, git commit
and some more commits
Trust me. You know me!
/me gives up and figure it out tomorrow
Noight all o/
23:16
\o
@PaulCrovella watched ep6?

A Game of Threads

Warning: Game of Thrones S7 SPOILERS
@RonniSkansing you can't do that attack if you set X Frame headers, right?
user924016
yes not the frame counting
user924016
but you can do it via window ref, like with window.open
23:26
I don't understand that.
AJAX is prevented, and with that header you can't even send a GET as that user with an iFrame.
user924016
allenph you make a iframe
user924016
inside is a form pointing to target site , a script below that clicks it
user924016
the iframe itself does not point to the victim site
user924016
x-frame-options does not mitigate normal csrf, csrf can be done inside a iframe and has nothing to do with the header except it cant show the result of such a request
user924016
does it make sense?
23:35
You would get no reply.
So how do you know you logged in successfully or not?
user924016
you could either do normal fingerprinting via the login redirect param
user924016
or use a ref = window.open(..loginStateLeakyUrl ); ref.length == n
user924016
try looking at this, it is the normal method via redirect param
user924016
browserleaks.com/social (theres a explanation box below)

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