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by tptacek
5750 days ago
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The easy answer here is to say, "you mean besides DotNetNuke". The deeper answer would be to point out that my day job is security evaluation for apps, roughly 50% of which are Fortune-100 web applications, roughly 60% of which are .NET applications, and you're flat-out wrong. There's a reason why cookie/session security is #3 on the OWASP top 10. You're also presuming that the issue being discussed is, specifically, a cookie. I understand why you're as defensive as you are; you're a professional .NET developer and Hacker News is hostile to Microsoft and, especially, .NET. Listen to me: I am not hostile to Microsoft or .NET. Microsoft is a client of ours. They do software security better than any company in the industry. Take my word for it: it appears that they screwed this one up just like everyone else that tries to encrypt with AES. |
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Yes, I see you've already mentioned DNN. It's good that you have that example. It would be interesting if I somehow claimed that every app is immune to it.
Countless apps have countless vulnerabilities.
>You're also presuming that the issue being discussed is, specifically, a cookie.
I know that the issue being discussed is specifically a cookie. It's specifically an AES-encrypted cookie.
To your edit: Defensive? Hardly. I'm just bitter after an endless stream of B.S. security claims by the security industry. It always follows the same pattern of arm waving and press releases, with a promised demonstration, and then the day of reckoning comes and...quiet. Maybe this will be the exception but, we'll see.
This has nothing to do with any sort of loyalty to .NET, though I hardly find HN to be anti-.NET, or anti-Microsoft for that matter. Whatever, in any case. It isn't my fight to wage.