Detaillierter Kursinhalt
DAY 1
Cyber security basics
- What is security?
 - Threat and risk
 - Cyber security threat types
 - Consequences of insecure software
 
The OWASP Top Ten
- OWASP Top 10 – 2017
 - A1 – Injection
- Injection principles
 - Injection attacks
 - SQL injection
- SQL injection basics
 - Lab – SQL injection
 - Attack techniques
 - Content-based blind SQL injection
 - Time-based blind SQL injection
 
 - SQL injection best practices
- Input validation
 - Parameterized queries
 - Additional considerations
 - Lab – SQL injection best practices
 - Case study – Hacking Fortnite accounts
 
 - Code injection
- Code injection via input()
 - OS command injection
- Lab – Command injection
 - OS command injection best practices
 - Avoiding command injection with the right APIs
 - Lab – Command injection best practices
 - Case study – Shellshock
 - Lab – Shellshock
 - Case study – Command injection via ping
 
 - Script injection
- Server-side template injection (SSTI)
 - Lab – Template injection
 
 
 - General protection best practices
 
 - A2 – Broken Authentication
- Authentication basics
 - Multi-factor authentication
 - Authentication weaknesses – spoofing
 - Spoofing on the Web
 - Case study – PayPal 2FA bypass
 - Password management
- Inbound password management
 - Storing account passwords
 - Password in transit
 - Lab – Is just hashing passwords enough?
 - Dictionary attacks and brute forcing
 - Salting
 - Adaptive hash functions for password storage
 - Password policy
- NIST authenticator requirements for memorized secrets
 
 - Case study – The Ashley Madison data breach
- The dictionary attack
 - The ultimate crack
 - Exploitation and the lessons learned
 
 - Password database migration
- (Mis)handling None passwords
 
 
 
 
DAY 2
The OWASP Top Ten
- A2 – Broken Authentication
- Password management
- Outbound password management
- Hard coded passwords
 - Best practices
 - Lab – Hardcoded password
 - Protecting sensitive information in memory
- Challenges in protecting memory
 
 
 
 - Outbound password management
 - Session management
- Session management essentials
 - Session ID best practices
 - Why do we protect session IDs – Session hijacking
 - Session fixation
 - Session handling in Flask
 
 
 - Password management
 - A3 – Sensitive Data Exposure
- Information exposure
 - Exposure through extracted data and aggregation
 - Case study – Strava data exposure
 - Error and exception handling principles
 
 - A4 – XML External Entities (XXE)
- DTD and the entities
 - Entity expansion
 - Lab – Billion laughs attack
 - External Entity Attack (XXE)
- File inclusion with external entities
 - Server-Side Request Forgery with external entities
 - Lab – External entity attack
 - Case study – XXE vulnerability in SAP Store
 - Preventing XXE
 - Lab – Using non-vulnerable parsers
 
 
 - A5 – Broken Access Control
- Access control basics
 - Failure to restrict URL access
 - Confused deputy
- Insecure direct object reference (IDOR)
 - Lab – Insecure Direct Object Reference
 - Authorization bypass through user-controlled keys
 - Case study – Authorization bypass on Facebook
 - Lab – Horizontal authorization
 
 - File upload
- Unrestricted file upload
 - Good practices
 - Lab – Unrestricted file upload
 
 
 - A6 – Security Misconfiguration
- Configuration principles
 - Python configuration best practices
- Configuring Flask
 
 
 - A7 – Cross-site Scripting (XSS)
- Cross-site scripting basics
 - Cross-site scripting types
- Persistent cross-site scripting
 - Reflected cross-site scripting
 - Client-side (DOM-based) cross-site scripting
 - Lab – Stored XSS
 - Lab – Reflected XSS
 - Case study – XSS in Fortnite accounts
 
 - XSS protection best practices
- Protection principles – escaping
 - XSS protection APIs in Python
 - XSS protection in Jinja2
 - Lab – XSS fix / stored
 - Lab – XSS fix / reflected
 - Additional protection layers
 - Client-side protection principles
 
 
 - A8 – Insecure Deserialization
- Serialization and deserialization challenges
 - Deserializing untrusted streams
 - Deserialization with pickle
 - Lab – Deserializing with Pickle
 - PyYAML deserialization challenges
 - Deserialization best practices
 
 
DAY 3
The OWASP Top Ten
- A9 – Using Components with Known Vulnerabilities
- Using vulnerable components
 - Assessing the environment
 - Hardening
 - Untrusted functionality import
 - Malicious packages in Python
 - Importing JavaScript
 - Lab – Importing JavaScript
 - Case study – The British Airways data breach
 - Vulnerability management
- Patch management
 - Vulnerability databases
 
 
 - A10 – Insufficient Logging & Monitoring
- Logging and monitoring principles
 - Insufficient logging
 - Plaintext passwords at Facebook
 - Logging best practices
 - Monitoring best practices
 
 - Web application security beyond the Top Ten
- Client-side security
 - Same Origin Policy
- Lab – Same-origin policy demo
 - Tabnabbing
 - Lab – Reverse tabnabbing
 
 - Frame sandboxing
- Cross-Frame Scripting (XFS) attack
 - Lab – Clickjacking
 - Clickjacking beyond hijacking a click
 - Clickjacking protection best practices
 - Lab – Using CSP to prevent clickjacking
 
 
 
Common software security weaknesses
- Input validation
- Input validation principles
- Blacklists and whitelists
 - Data validation techniques
 - Lab – Input validation
 - What to validate – the attack surface
 - Where to validate – defense in depth
 - How to validate – validation vs transformations
 - Output sanitization
 - Encoding challenges
 - Lab – Encoding challenges
 - Validation with regex
 - Regular expression denial of service (ReDoS)
 - Lab – Regular expression denial of service (ReDoS)
 - Dealing with ReDoS
 
 - Files and streams
- Path traversal
 - Path traversal-related examples
 - Lab – Path traversal
 - Additional challenges in Windows
 - Virtual resources
 - Path traversal best practices
 - Format string issues
 
 - Unsafe native code
- Native code dependence
 - Lab – Unsafe native code
 - Best practices for dealing with native code
 
 
 - Input validation principles
 
JSON security
- JSON injection
 - Dangers of JSONP
 - JSON/JavaScript hijacking
 - Best practices
 - Case study – ReactJS vulnerability in HackerOne
 
Wrap up
- Secure coding principles
- Principles of robust programming by Matt Bishop
 - Secure design principles of Saltzer and Schröder
 
 - And now what?
- Software security sources and further reading
 - Python resources