I just came upon this note in the MDN that got me thinking:
> Note: It's possible for the returned promise to neither resolve nor reject, as the user is not required to make a choice at all and may simply ignore the request.
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Base64 is a group of similar binary-to-text encoding schemes that represent binary data in an ASCII string format by translating it into a radix-64 representation. The term Base64 originates from a specific MIME content transfer encoding. Each Base64 digit represents exactly 6 bits of data. Three 8-bit bytes (i.e., a total of 24 bits) can therefore be represented by four 6-bit Base64 digits.
== Design ==
The particular set of 64 characters chosen to represent the 64 place-values for the base varies between implementations. The general strategy is to choose 64 characters that are common to most...
"Each Base64 digit represents exactly 6 bits of data. Three 8-bit bytes (i.e., a total of 24 bits) can therefore be represented by four 6-bit Base64 digits."
So turns out that a few major banks in Israel don't have HSTS on their sites. One of which, when the security journalist brought it to their attention, said that since they always upgrade HTTP requests to HTTPS, HSTS is not needed. 🤦♂️
honestly though, a sophisticated (not even really that sophisticated) attacker doesn't really need to do too much to perform a MIM attack even on https
I don't want to go into too many details about it, bc in the US you can be liable/guilty for even teaching someone to hack from what I understand, and although you are more knowledgeable than me on most things, if you don't know how to do it it would still technically be teaching you or anyone in this room
@DavidKamer It's also worth noting that the only way it might work is if you actually typed the address for the site under attack in the URL bar, and didn't add https
@MadaraUchiha no, I'm saying https isn't a VPN and it doesn't tunnel your traffic. You can pretty easily fake https out. Something I recently learned...
I still think even non-hsts https is going to be sufficient, if the UA already has a valid cert for the site, and if the user doesn't know how to override https warnings
not sufficient for a bank site of course
but for most things I think you cover most cases even with those assumptions
Then, I send the following message to people: It seems like there was a problem with your Example account. Click here to reset your password http://example.com/password-reset
HSTS basically tells the browser "Know that this site uses HTTPS and will always use HTTPS. You are to always use HTTPS when entering this site, even when the user did not specify it"
If you had HSTS, clicking on the http://example.com link would have instantly made the browser go to https://example.com, and since I don't have a valid cert, the user would get an error.
Yeah, but nobody in his right mind would do anything "password" related on an open unknown network. Chances are higher to just find money on the street if this is eventually about money
@DavidKamer Stuff is pushed out by updates every so often. If you go on a really old computer, your gonna get bunch of cert errors cause it won't trust new CAs.
@rlemon I think browsers should have big prompt when logging in to http sites. "YOU ARE BEING A FUCKING IDIOT. ARE YOU SURE YOU WANT TO CONTINUE?" "No." "Definitely Not" "Continue...stupidity is incurable"
@jAndy I think you misunderstand. It's because that 90% of our traffic is through about 10 websites, and all of them happen to use HTTPS, two of them happen to control the biggest DNS servers, and some are trusted CAs themselves, that most people are relatively "secure".
Hmm guys, what status code would be the best when user input fails due to modification on the database from another user between user viewing the data and giving its input? -- IE a user tries to "buys" something, but the seller just unlisted the item while he presses the "buy" button.
@MadaraUchiha I found a bug a little bit ago where someone could "force" a phishing page to popup with the apple/icloud domain where iOS/macOS would suggest autofilling the users saved iCloud/Apple ID password. Uses similar idea.
@paul23 well it shouldn't. That should be maybe a 404. If the item isn't found anymore.
If the owner decides to delete their account and the product along with it. It shouldn't change status code. Thats a security issue (not a big one obv).
@JBis That would mean nearly each 403 (from a GET request) should actually be a 404? Making the whole idea of status code responses kind of useless?
Since they could know it anyways, as names need to be unique they could know it by testing names when entering new items and looking at "illegal names".