Nytro Posted January 9, 2017 Report Posted January 9, 2017 Exploiting Misconfigured CORS (Cross Origin Resource Sharing) DECEMBER 16, 2016 ADMIN Hey frnds few days before noticed a blog post for exploiting facebook chat and reading all the chats of users so that made me to interested to know about the issues, and basically it was misconfigured CORS configuration where null origin is allowed with credentials true, it was not something heard for the 1st time, @albinowax from the portswigger explained it very well in his blog post, so after reading that messenger blog post i went to test for the same issue for some targets where i allowed to test it. but before that here are some tips about CORS where it can be exploitable from attackers point of view: POORLY IMPLEMENTED, BEST CASE FOR ATTACK: Access-Control-Allow-Origin: https://attacker.com Access-Control-Allow-Credentials: true POORLY IMPLEMENTED, EXPLOITABLE: Access-Control-Allow-Origin: null Access-Control-Allow-Credentials: true BAD IMPLEMENTATION BUT NOT EXPLOITABLE: Access-Control-Allow-Origin: * Access-Control-Allow-Credentials: true or just Access-Control-Allow-Origin: * even this is not good from development point of view but due to own rules of CORS if Access-Control-Allow-Origin set to * we don’t get benefit Access-Control-Allow-Credentials: true means no cookie access of the victim. am not going to more deep about CORS, as earlier blog post covered it very well. so in above i mentioned 3 cases where first two cases is exploitable in that eg of 2nd case is that Facebook Messenger chat issue which i mentioned in earlier section of the post, and eg of 1st case is mine which i found 2 days before only where any arbitrary Origin is allowed and same Origin get reflected back to Access-Control-Allow-Origin with Credentials set to True, the best way i found to check for CORS issue is using CURL. eg : curl https://test.victim.com -H "Origin: https://geekboy.ninja"-I and check the response if Origin is reflected in the response or not. OR if your burp pro user, Burp Active Scan may find this for you, but in mine case it didnt, idk the reason, when i CURLed my target manully curl https://my.target.com -H "Origin: https://geekboy.ninja" -I , the Origin didnt got reflected but when i curled specifc endpoint where all users data getting back into response curl https://my.target.com/api/web/user -H "Origin: https://geekboy.ninja" -I it reflected back with my host with Credentials set to True and that’s enough to make this work and steal all that data. i made quick poc code for it function cors() { var xhttp = new XMLHttpRequest(); xhttp.onreadystatechange = function() { if (this.readyState == 4 && this.status == 200) { document.getElementById("demo").innerHTML = alert(this.responseText); } }; xhttp.open("GET", "https://my.target.com/api/web/user", true); xhttp.withCredentials = true; xhttp.send(); } And here how it worked Sources for better understanding of CORS: http://blog.portswigger.net/2016/10/exploiting-cors-misconfigurations-for.html https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/HTTP/Access_control_CORS https://ejj.io/misconfigured-cors/ Sursa: http://www.geekboy.ninja/blog/exploiting-misconfigured-cors-cross-origin-resource-sharing/ Quote