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You are here: Home arrow Forum arrow Columnsarrow Gatesarrow [Article]-Oracle Web Hacking Part I
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May 26, 2012, 03:24:16 AM *
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Author Topic: [Article]-Oracle Web Hacking Part I  (Read 40184 times)
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don
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« on: April 21, 2011, 02:12:47 PM »

After 2 years advancing his career (and his family), Chris Gates is back with a new article. He'll be bringing you some Oracle hotness.

Thanks Chris, and it's great to have you back.

Permanent link: [Article]-Oracle Web Hacking Part I

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By Chris Gates, CISSP, GCIH, C|EH, CPTS

Oracle applications are not what you’d call simple.  I think any DBA or Oracle Application Server Administrator will be the first to attest to that fact.  Oracle, with its great products, comes with some un-pleasantries.  These are:
   
   1. Oracle applications are complicated (hopefully we all agree on this).

   2. They come with loads of default content and no clear way to remove that content.  There is no IISLockdown equivalent for Oracle applications.  Content you don’t want must be removed manually.  Some of this content can be used to run database queries, read documents, gather information via information leakage on the pages or perform XSS attacks.

   3. Users have to pay for patches and extended advisory information (even then, no Proof of Concept code is released by Oracle).

   4. And lastly, you have a fairly complicated patch/upgrade process which leads to an "it’s working, don’t touch it" mentality by a fair amount of admins.

This provides a target rich environment for pentesters and bad guys. Let’s take a look.


Let us know what you think,
Don
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chrisg
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« Reply #1 on: April 22, 2011, 09:27:44 PM »

thanks Don!

questions or comments send them my way.
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BillV
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« Reply #2 on: April 23, 2011, 07:46:06 AM »

Very nice! Thanks, CG!

Are there version limitations on these applications provided by Oracle? I see in one of the screenshots you're looking at 10g (9.0.4) but are there versions where you're likely to see some of this out there as opposed to versions that won't have it?
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chrisg
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« Reply #3 on: April 26, 2011, 03:05:24 PM »

so every web app is different from a default content point of view, privilege escalation, XSS, sqli would be dependent on both the backend DB and the oracle application itself.

hope that makes sense. 
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