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posted by chromas on Saturday June 15 2019, @04:11PM   Printer-friendly
from the ';
dropâ €trou;#
dept.

SQL Injection Attacks Represent Two-Third of All Web App Attacks

For its "State of the Internet" report, Akamai analyzed data gathered from users of its Web application firewall technology between November 2017 and March 2019. The exercise shows that SQL injection (SQLi) now represents nearly two-thirds (65.1%) of all Web application attacks. That's up sharply from the 44% of Web application layer attacks that SQLi represented just two years ago.

Local File Inclusion (LFI) attacks, which, like SQLi, are also enabled by a Web application's failure to properly validate user input, accounted for another 24.7% of attacks. Together, SQLi and LFI attacks represented 89.8% of all attacks at the Web application layer over the 17-month period of Akamai's study.

[...] SQL injection errors and cross-site scripting (XSS) errors have topped, or nearly topped, the Open Web Application Security Project's (OWASP) list of top 10 Web vulnerabilities for more than a decade. Just this week, in fact, HackerOne published a report showing XSS errors to be by far the most common security vulnerability in Web apps across organizations. Both XSS and SQLi are well understood, and many researchers have catalogued the dangers associated with them for years.

The fact that so many Web apps still have them reflects the relatively scant attention paid to security in the application development stage, says Andy Ellis, chief security officer at Akamai. "It is not that the developers are making errors," he says. "It is system that we put them into that is dangerous."

[...] Akamai's data[pdf] shows most Web application attacks originate from inside the US and most targets are US-based as well. Of the nearly 4 billion application-layer attacks that Akamai counted over the 17-month period, some 2.7 billion targeted US organizations. Companies in the UK, Germany, Brazil, and India were also relatively heavily targeted. though nowhere nearly as much as US companies.


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  • (Score: 1, Insightful) by Anonymous Coward on Sunday June 16 2019, @12:39AM (3 children)

    by Anonymous Coward on Sunday June 16 2019, @12:39AM (#856110)

    This is simple incompetence.
    Only if you tell them a better way and they ignore you.

    Do not confuse incompetence with lack of knowledge. They do look the same and some people argue they are the same. But I would rather have a dev who can make a mistake and go 'doh here is how to fix it' than 'doh who cares I will just leave it and do it again when you are not looking'.

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  • (Score: 2, Disagree) by darkfeline on Sunday June 16 2019, @04:26AM (2 children)

    by darkfeline (1030) on Sunday June 16 2019, @04:26AM (#856157) Homepage

    Lack of knowledge is incompetence.

    Competent == able to do the job effectively.
    Incompetent == not able to do the job effectively, whether due to lack of training, knowledge, or head mass.

    Or more specifically, if you need to have pointed out to you by someone else that you are ignorant and what you are doing is a security problem, you are incompetent. Someone who is competent would at least know that they are ignorant and obtain the proper knowledge, training, or counsel before attempting to hack together sensitive infrastructure.

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    • (Score: 1, TouchĂ©) by Anonymous Coward on Sunday June 16 2019, @05:31AM (1 child)

      by Anonymous Coward on Sunday June 16 2019, @05:31AM (#856172)

      Yep as soon as you learn about a tech you know 100% how that thing works. You do not need anyone telling you any better at that point.

      Someone who is competent would at least know that they are ignorant and obtain the proper knowledge, training, or counsel before attempting to hack together sensitive infrastructure
      Mistakes happen. It is how you deal with them that matters. People do not always have 100% knowledge on something. It takes years to acquire good training. That is from code reviews and being humble. Spouting off that someone is incompetent has implications in a business environment. But you should know that or else you are incompetent (by your own definition).

      • (Score: 2) by darkfeline on Monday June 17 2019, @06:44AM

        by darkfeline (1030) on Monday June 17 2019, @06:44AM (#856513) Homepage

        >Yep as soon as you learn about a tech you know 100% how that thing works. You do not need anyone telling you any better at that point.

        I don't know what the point of this statement is. It sounds like you're implying that I said you need 100% knowledge to be competent. I said no such thing. It also sounds like you're implying that I said that someone who is competent has no room to improve. I also said no such thing.

        >Mistakes happen. It is how you deal with them that matters.

        That's what I said. Even if you are ignorant, the way you handle a task may allow you to qualify as competent. You even quoted the sentence where I stated that.

        >Spouting off that someone is incompetent has implications in a business environment

        Er, yes? There are many uncomfortable facts that you should not voice in a modern professional environment. Whether or not someone is incompetent is one such fact that's best left unstated, at least during work; off-hours, you might sympathize with a close friend. I also have no idea how this addresses my claim. It's yet another non sequitur "argument".

        >But you should know that or else you are incompetent (by your own definition).

        Ah! An ad hominem! A clear indicator that one does not have a strong argument.

        I'll say it again:

        If you cannot do your job, whether due to lack of knowledge, skills, or anything else, you are incompetent by definition. Note that this does not preclude someone who is incompetent at some job later becoming competent.at said job.

        Here, this is the definition of competent from a dictionary:

        adjective
        having the necessary ability, knowledge, or skill to do something successfully.

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