Tuesday | 7 October, 2008
Computerworld
Researcher: Web services security risks largely ignored
Software vendors should add security filtering capabilities to their Web services products, according to researcher Alex Stamos
Computerworld Buyer's Guide - Vendors Matched to this Article
Related Features
  • +

    Strategies for Dealing With IT Complexity 24/12/2007 10:30:47

    Every innovation, every business process improvement, comes with an IT complexity tax that must be paid by CIOs in time, money and sweat. Here are strategies to mitigate the increasing complexity of IT as it enables new business.
    Every innovation, every business process improvement, comes with an IT complexity tax that must be paid by CIOs in time, money and sweat. Here are strategies to mitigate the increasing complexity of IT as it enables new business.
  • +

    What Price Innovation? 05/11/2007 13:44:31

    CIOs say they want more than the traditional “your mess for less” relationship with their outsourcing providers. And the providers want to market themselves as partners in innovation. So why isn’t it happening?
    CIOs say they want more than the traditional "your mess for less" relationship with their outsourcing providers. And the providers want to market themselves as partners in innovation. So why isn't it happening?
Additional Resources
Executive Guides
Whitepapers
Zones
Zone logoZones provide focussed content from Computerworld and leading technology partners.

Newsletter Subscription

Sign up for our Computerworld newsletters!
Computerworld's twice-daily news service keeps you in touch with the latest, most important headlines from Australia and around the world.
Keep up with the latest virtualisation technologies, products, news and features.
RSS Feeds

In their rush to implement Web services, some companies may be exposing themselves to new security risks that they may not fully understand, a security researcher said at the CanSecWest/core06 conference here in Vancouver on Thursday.

During a conference presentation, researcher Alex Stamos outlined how a number of Web services technologies, including the AJAX (Asynchronous JavaScript and XML) and the XQuery query language could be exploited by hackers to dig up secret information and attack systems.

Web services is a catch-all expression used to describe a form of distributed computing that uses standards based on XML (Extensible Markup Language) to simplify the job of programming software. One of its key tenets is that Web services applications are extremely portable and can easily interact with different types of software.

While this cross-platform capability can simplify programming, it can also create security risks by creating situations that may not have been anticipated by software developers, said Stamos, a founding partner of Information Security Partners, based in San Francisco. During his talk, he described an attack where a user could enter malicious code in a Web form and then get that code to run by calling up the company's customer service number and tricking a representative into inadvertently executing it.

Stamos also showed how Web services requests could be used to conduct denial of service attacks, either by creating malicious XML queries that used massive amounts of memory, or by bombarding databases applications with more requests than they can handle.

Web application vendors have created tools that work like "magic," hiding complexity and making it very easy to create Web services. Unfortunately, these tools also make it easy for their users to ignore the security implications of the software they're building, Stamos said. "Because of all that magic pixie dust, the people who write Web services don't necessarily understand how they work," he said. "We have a lot of customers who are hanging unbelievably crazy functionality... just out on the Internet."

And hackers are catching on. Last month, security vendor Symantec issued its biannual Internet Security Threat report, noting that Web applications represent an increasingly attractive target for attackers. Of all vulnerabilities disclosed in the last six months of 2005, nearly 70 percent were associated with Web applications, Symantec said.

This trend is of particular concern to smaller companies that may not have the budgets to fully test the security of their software. But Stamos believes that Web application vendors could help out by adding input filtering capabilities to their products, to make them better able to tell when their software is being asked to do something that it shouldn't.

Security researchers also should be paying more attention to the issue, Stamos said. "We want to get more security people looking at Web services stuff," he said. "Web application security is the red-headed stepchild of the security industry."

Computerworld Buyer's Guide - Vendors Matched to this Article
More about Symantec, HIS Limited
Market Place

Computerworld Member Login


 

Smart SOA World Tour

Discover how SOA can create smarter outcomes for your business.

Attend and learn:

  • How SOA is helping leading companies to become more agile
  • Where you should be applying SOA processes in your company
  • The top SOA implementation mistakes to avoid

Click here for more information.
Whitepaper

Mimosa™ NearPoint™ for Microsoft® Exchange Server: Email Archiving 101

Email archiving is emerging as a critical new application for managing email. Learn how to reduce and manage online and offline email storage, add powerful tools for legal discovery and compliance and extend native exchange recovery capability by reading on.

Enterprise IT Buyer's Guide
Find Technology Vendors Fast
 
Find vendors by name | Find by category
Sponsored Links