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Web attacks can peak at nearly 38,000 an hour, Imperva reports

January 2012 by Imperva

Imperva announced the release of the second Imperva Web Application Attack Report (WAAR), which revealed that web applications are subject to business logic attacks. The WAAR, created as a part of Imperva’s ongoing Hacker Intelligence Initiative, offers insight into actual malicious web application attack traffic over a period of six months, June 2011 through November 2011.

Imperva monitored and categorized attacks across the internet targeting 40 different applications. The WAAR outlines the frequency, type and geography of origin of each attack to help security professionals better prioritize vulnerability remediation.

“Business logic attacks are attractive for hackers since they follow a legitimate flow of interaction of a user with the application,” said Amichai Shulman, Imperva’s CTO. “This interaction is guided by an understanding of how specific sequences of operations affect the application’s functionality. Therefore, the abuser can lead the application to reveal private information for harvesting, skew information shared with other users and much more — often bypassing security controls.”

Report Highlights

 Automated application attacks continue. In the six month period from June – November 2011, the observed web applications suffered attacks in the range of 130,000 to 385,000 per month. At its peak, the application set was under attack at a rate of nearly 38,000 per hour or ten per second.

 Hackers are relying on business logic attacks due to their ability to evade detection: Imperva also investigated two types of Business Logic attacks: Comment Spamming and Email Extraction. Comment Spamming injects malicious links into comment fields to alter search engine results and potentially defraud consumers. Email Extraction simply catalogs email addresses for building spam lists. These Business Logic attacks accounted for 14% of the analyzed malicious traffic.

 The geographic origin of Business Logic attacks were:
o Email extraction was dominated by hosts based in African countries.
o An unusual portion of the Comment-spamming activity was observed from eastern-European countries.

 Hackers exploit five common application vulnerabilities: The five most common application vulnerabilities are: Remote File Inclusion (RFI), SQL Injection (SQLi), Local File Inclusion (LFI), Cross Site Scripting (XSS) and Directory Traversal (DT). Cross Site Scripting and Directory Traversal are the most prevalent classical attack types. Why are these vulnerabilities targeted? Hackers prefer the path of least resistance and application vulnerabilities offer a rich target.


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