Didn"t forge 2010-06-30 05:58 采纳率: 25%
浏览 193
已采纳

为什么人们把代码如"抛出1; 不是邪恶的"和"为(;) ;"放在 json 的反应前面? [重复]

Possible Duplicate:
Why does Google prepend while(1); to their JSON responses?

Google returns json like this:

throw 1; <dont be evil> { foo: bar}

and Facebooks ajax has json like this:

for(;;); {"error":0,"errorSummary": ""}
  • Why do they put code that would stop execution and makes invalid json?
  • How do they parse it if it's invalid and would crash if you tried to eval it?
  • Do they just remove it from the string (seems expensive)?
  • Are there any security advantages to this?

In response to it being for security purposes:

If the scraper is on another domain they would have to use a script tag to get the data because XHR won't work cross-domain. Even without the for(;;); how would the attacker get the data? It's not assigned to a variable so wouldn't it just be garbage collected because there's no references to it?

Basically to get the data cross domain they would have to do

<script src="http://target.com/json.js"></script>

But even without the crash script prepended the attacker can't use any of the Json data without it being assigned to a variable that you can access globally (it isn't in these cases). The crash code effectivly does nothing because even without it they have to use server sided scripting to use the data on their site.

转载于:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/3146798/why-do-people-put-code-like-throw-1-dont-be-evil-and-for-in-front-of

  • 写回答

4条回答 默认 最新

  • 7*4 2010-06-30 09:02
    关注

    Even without the for(;;); how would the attacker get the data?

    Attacks are based on altering the behaviour of the built-in types, in particular Object and Array, by altering their constructor function or its prototype. Then when the targeted JSON uses a {...} or [...] construct, they'll be the attacker's own versions of those objects, with potentially-unexpected behaviour.

    For example, you can hack a setter-property into Object, that would betray the values written in object literals:

    Object.prototype.__defineSetter__('x', function(x) {
        alert('Ha! I steal '+x);
    });
    

    Then when a <script> was pointed at some JSON that used that property name:

    {"x": "hello"}
    

    the value "hello" would be leaked.

    The way that array and object literals cause setters to be called is controversial. Firefox removed the behaviour in version 3.5, in response to publicised attacks on high-profile web sites. However at the time of writing Safari (4) and Chrome (5) are still vulnerable to this.

    Another attack that all browsers now disallow was to redefine constructor functions:

    Array= function() {
        alert('I steal '+this);
    };
    
    [1, 2, 3]
    

    And for now, IE8's implementation of properties (based on the ECMAScript Fifth Edition standard and Object.defineProperty) currently does not work on Object.prototype or Array.prototype.

    But as well as protecting past browsers, it may be that extensions to JavaScript cause more potential leaks of a similar kind in future, and in that case chaff should protect against those too.

    本回答被题主选为最佳回答 , 对您是否有帮助呢?
    评论
查看更多回答(3条)

报告相同问题?

悬赏问题

  • ¥15 GDI处理通道视频时总是带有白色锯齿
  • ¥20 用雷电模拟器安装百达屋apk一直闪退
  • ¥15 算能科技20240506咨询(拒绝大模型回答)
  • ¥15 自适应 AR 模型 参数估计Matlab程序
  • ¥100 角动量包络面如何用MATLAB绘制
  • ¥15 merge函数占用内存过大
  • ¥15 Revit2020下载问题
  • ¥15 使用EMD去噪处理RML2016数据集时候的原理
  • ¥15 神经网络预测均方误差很小 但是图像上看着差别太大
  • ¥15 单片机无法进入HAL_TIM_PWM_PulseFinishedCallback回调函数