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by tptacek
6094 days ago
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The libraries people use to "escape all inputs, etc" are providing effectively the same functionality as CSP is, but that's not my real concern. My real concern is, despite the fact that developers have the ability to set policies about what regions on the page can contain dynamic content, "policy" is generally too brittle to describe what people need to put on pages in real-world apps. |
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I understand how you could think that was what was involved, as I got the same impression from the article and also thought that was dumb. However, that's not what is going on. You shut down broad classes of functionality entirely, and are required to provide all legit Javascript through <script> tags, which furthermore must come from your whitelisted sources.
(Actually, there are some other modes too; consult the spec for details. However, I expect this is the one people will be talking about.)
The article isn't exactly wrong, but it doesn't accurately convey what is going on, either. Basically, if you can discipline yourself well enough to only use included files (which isn't a terrible style anyhow), then this allows you to ensure that you won't execute injected content.
Is this something that you should be correctly escaping? Yes, absolutely. I am a huge advocate of that in my workplace. But I would certainly take advantage of this extra layer of protection, too, rather than rely on everybody in my company getting it all absolutely right, all the time. The problem with something like escaping is that you make one little error and you lose everything. This goes a long way towards mitigating that.
I haven't done a lot of thinking about this, but it looks good; in general, voluntarily discarding privileges you don't intend to use is a good security practice.