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posted by CoolHand on Friday November 27 2015, @11:12PM   Printer-friendly
from the injection-infection dept.

One of the hackers suspected of being behind the TalkTalk breach, which led to the personal details of at least 150,000 people being stolen, used a vulnerability discovered two years before he was even born.

That method of attack was SQL injection (SQLi), where hackers typically enter malicious commands into forms on a website to make it churn out juicy bits of data. It's been used to steal the personal details of World Health Organization employees, grab data from the Wall Street Journal, and hit the sites of US federal agencies.

"It's the most easy way to hack," the pseudonymous hacker w0rm, who was responsible for the Wall Street Journal hack, told Motherboard. The attack took only a "few hours."

But, for all its simplicity, as well as its effectiveness at siphoning the digital innards of corporations and governments alike, SQLi is relatively easy to defend against.


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  • (Score: 1, Interesting) by Anonymous Coward on Saturday November 28 2015, @01:34AM

    by Anonymous Coward on Saturday November 28 2015, @01:34AM (#268936)

    Prepared statements completely eliminate

    all SQL injection attacks

    i'm generally of that opinion, and i was thinking about writing that in my original comment, but the problem with anything related to computers and security is there's always some smarty pants that eventually comes along and figures out a way :p

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