Referers are also not availible in some security settings.
Zonelabs Zone Alarm Pro, and both Norton Internet Security and
Norton Personal Firewall all drop the referring URL. Forget
spoofable, sometimes it's just not there at all.
See this for details from Symantec:
http://service1.symantec.com/SUPPORT/nip.nsf/46f26a2d6dafb0a788256bc7005c3fa3/b9b47ad7eddd343b88256c6b006a85a8?OpenDocument&src=bar_sch_nam
There are a number of tricks you can use to get more information
from the user's machine, but Referring URL isn't reliable. Not
to mention it can also be non-existant via meta refreshing.
On Tue, 1 Mar 2005, Saqib Ali wrote:
> It is a commonly used technique called anti-leeching or anti-leaching .
>
> Search for "anti leeching php" or "anti leeching jsp" on Google. You
> will find many resources.
>
> You can control the path that a user takes by checking for the
> HTTP_REFERER . But this is not a fail-proof technique, because the
> HTTP_REFERER can alwasy be spoofed.
>
> In Peace,
> Saqib Ali
> http://validate.sf.net
>
>
> On Tue, 1 Mar 2005 10:19:37 -0500, Kevin Conaway
> <kevin.conaway_at_gmail.com> wrote:
>> For our application, we would like to prevent users from requesting
>> application resources directly. E.g. browsing to
>> http://localhost/app/method.do?id=5&type=3 instead of actually
>> clicking on a link that the application provides.
>>
>> We would like to do this without a major impact on our code. I was
>> thinking of using the following scenario:
>>
>> - Currently we have tag libraries that help build all our URLS. These
>> tag libraries would be modified to include a strong cryptographic
>> token that is unique to each URL/User combination. - The token/URL
>> combination would be stored in the application context for a
>> pre-determined amount of time.
>>
>> - Next, we would use a Servlet filter to intercept the URL. First,
>> deny URLS requested without tokens. If a token is passed, verify that
>> matches the token stored in the application context for the requested
>> URL.
>>
>> For the token, I was considering using SecureRandom to generate a
>> random number and compute a hash of the random number and the URI
>> being requested. This would be stored along with with URI and the
>> user Id.
>>
>> Could anyone point out any pitfalls I need to be aware of, or if I'm
>> going about things the wrong way?
>>
>> Thanks
>>
>> Kevin
>>
>
>
> --
> In Peace,
> Saqib Ali
> http://tools.tldp.org/search.php <--- Search for Linux HOWTOs
>
-R XSS Cheatsheet: http://www.shocking.com/~rsnake/xss.html
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Received on Mar 03 2005