Skip to main content
1 of 2
vincent
  • 171
  • 4

Should we prevent this login XSS attack?

Setup

  • Restful API and thin JS web client
  • Login POST Endpoint using parameters email and password
  • Access-Control-Allow-Origin is set, so responses can only be retrieved from non attacker website. However, as per specs, a pre-flight request is not issued to the Login endpoint.

The Attack

A malicious website can make requests to the Login endpoint without the user knowing. The response can not be retrieved by the browser, however the requests still go through.

Why is this bad? At the very least the attacker can rate limit the users IP address. If they target a specific email, they can make it look like a DDOS using many (real user) ip addresses and lock out the email. If they have access to the network traffic they can even analyse the response package size to determine if a login attempt was successful (Distributed Brute Force).

Sort-of-solution

What we've done so far is adding a xss token that is tied to the requesting IP address. The token is first retrieved through a separate endpoint and then required to be submitted to the login endpoint. The login attempt is made only if the token is valid and matches the requesting IP. This prevents the above attack.

This unfortunately only works if the users IP doesn't change between requests. This is now becoming a problem as some users are using services like Tor or Onavo. These users can no longer use our system.

Additional Information

  • We can't use browser cookies or browser local storage
  • Browser might not send referrer if so configured by user

Question

Should we worry about this attack or just drop the xss token requirement? Is there a better way to prevent this attack? How do other services solve this?

vincent
  • 171
  • 4