A successful probe is when you test a few inputs, and you find one input that gives a different output (i.e. /user/123 gives 404, but /user/1 gives 403)
@JBis If they don't have a bug bounty program, I would not.
Not because of "boo they don't wanna pay me" or any some such, but it's entirely possible that they'd press charges against you for hacking them, even though you were benevolent and reported it.
@MadaraUchiha Hey. Why not leave it up? If someone wants to exploit, let them. Maybe apple will start a bounty program when they see they are loosing out on holes in their precious security reputation.
@MadaraUchiha Yet if everything is "blocked" it still isn't possible to find anything. And like I said if events/awesome-event would give 404 it could still be found by trying to register events and then finding which events do or do not exist. Using unique random generated keys like event/adfjlhak2332 is also not recommended by google as they prefer "good names" in uris.
> “I was just trying to call my friend, Nathan, to see if he wanted to play Fortnite,” he said, describing how he discovered the bug. “He didn’t answer right away, so I just swiped up and added my friend Diego, which forced Nathan to instantly join the call. We could both hear each other without him ever having to click the accept button.”
> It’s not clear how much Grant Thompson can expect to claim from Apple — although it will reportedly go toward his college tuition savings.
The best practice in that case, is for the <id> to not be globally unique, but unique for the user.
That is, I will see a different /ticket/1 than you, 1 would be the first ticket I ever opened, for example.
Now, I'm locked within my own ticket universe and can't search for /ticket/2 and hope that I might find someone else's ticket.
The naive alternative is to use GUIDs instead of numeric IDs, depending on how much you care about nice URLs (remember, we're talking about things that Google isn't supposed to index, because they're not supposed to be public, else you wouldn't care)
Still what would the knowledge of that "some other person has a ticket with id xyz" give you? You're still being denied from all access to that ticket: and even with per person unique ids one could be "semi confident" that "long time user ticket/1 exists.
Security would prevent you to give information about even which user owns that ticket or any endpoint/request containing that ticket id.
Or is this to give another "backup" in case of a lingering security hole? (Thus giving some "obfuscation" to that).
@MadaraUchiha Actually "GUIDs" can be just as secure as anything else: if they're random enough one has just as much trouble of guessing another key as they are in guess a user-password combination.
Biggest downside to me is that the ORM my predecessor chose requires numeric (incremental) ids as primary keys. And I always feel filthy having information twice in a database: and a UID (it's not about graphics :P) would mean that I have two columns whose sole purpose is to "uniquely identify the data". In direct contrast to the "one source of truth".
I've programmed everything up to now that I can just add those things within an hour or so (explicitly abstracted the whole key-getting away on backend, and frontend wouldn't care - other than the type system), I "just feel gross doing it".
Per user unique numeric is actually a good idea, though it actually requires a bit of actual programming work (instead of just adding a column to the database).
@MadaraUchiha ORM doesn't "support" that, making so I'd either have to manually run sql code (which makes unit test quite a bit harder) or do the checks -and incrementing the numeric- on webserver level.
I don't have the heart quite yet to tell my boss that I think it's better to stop using sails though. I shocked him last september already when I said "ok I'm going to use react/vue/angular whether you like it or not, I don't see any point in going forward with sencha.
I reallystarted to dislike emojis once they started to interfere why my ability to create lists, and each alphabetical list suddenly had some smiley with sunglasses as second item.