docworld.co.in OWASP Top 10 security. In this 2013 release, we - TopicsExpress



          

docworld.co.in OWASP Top 10 security. In this 2013 release, we made the following changes: 1)Broken Authentication and Session Management moved up in prevalence based on our data set. We believe this is probably because this area is being looked at harder, not because these issues are actually more prevalent. This caused Risks A2 and A3 to switch places. 2)Cross-Site Request Forgery (CSRF) moved down in prevalence based on our data set from 2010-A5 to 2013-A8. We believe this is because CSRF has been in the OWASP Top 10 for 6 years, and organizations and framework developers have focused on it enough to significantly reduce the number of CSRF vulnerabilities in real world applications. 3)We broadened Failure to Restrict URL Access from the 2010 OWASP Top 10 to be more inclusive: +2010-A8: Failure to Restrict URL Access is now 2013-A7: Missing Function Level Access Control – to cover all of function level access control. There are many ways to specify which function is being accessed, not just the URL. 4)We merged and broadened 2010-A7 & 2010-A9 to CREATE: 2013-A6: Sensitive Data Exposure: –This new category was created by merging 2010-A7 – Insecure Cryptographic Storage & 2010-A9 - Insufficient Transport Layer Protection, plus adding browser side sensitive data risks as well. This new category covers sensitive data protection (other than access control which is covered by 2013-A4 and 2013-A7) from the moment sensitive data is provided by the user, sent to and stored within the application, and then sent back to the browser again. 5)We added: 2013-A9: Using Known Vulnerable Components: +This issue was mentioned as part of 2010-A6 – Security Misconfiguration, but now has a category of its own as the growth and depth of component based development has significantly increased the risk of using known vulnerable components.
Posted on: Tue, 02 Jul 2013 01:33:11 +0000

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