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AJAXWorld News Desk AJAX Book Recommendation: "Ajax Security" by Hoffman and Sullivan
If you call yourself a professional web developer, you need this book
By: Brian J. Dillard
Feb. 2, 2008 06:00 AM
Reviewers overuse the phrase "required reading," but no other description fits the new book "Ajax Security" (2007, Addison Wesley, 470p). This exhaustive tome from Billy Hoffman and Bryan Sullivan places the specific security concerns of the Ajax programming model in historical perspective. It demonstrates not only new security threats that are unique to Ajax, but established threats that have gained new traction in the Web 2.0 era. It then details both the specific technical solutions and - more importantly - the mindset that are necessary to combat such threats. If you call yourself a professional web developer, you need this book. Because so many developers have historically overlooked the importance of security, the authors approach their topic for what it is: a remedial subject. They take pains to explain the basic mechanisms by which hackers have exploited insecure web applications over the last decade: cross-site request forgeries, denial of service attacks, cross-site scripting and SQL injection. Then they explain how those mechanisms have changed thanks to the rise of xmlHttpRequest, public APIs, mash-ups and aggregators. If you've ever read a Douglas Crockford rant about the "brokenness" of the web security model and wondered why the guy was such an alarmist, Hoffman and Sullivan are only too happy to provide you with a much-needed wake-up call. "Ajax Security" is written in a clear, direct style that mixes compelling narrative examples with both high-level technical discussions and granular programming how-tos. The authors even fashion Chapter 2, "The Heist," into a miniature techno-thriller, walking us through a day in the life of a fictitious hacker named Eve who practically cackles like a "Mission: Impossible" villain when she discovers the holes in an Ajax web app. The book's mixture of intro-level concepts, real-world analogies and advanced code examples should be jarring, but isn't, thanks to its conversational tone. "Ajax Security" should therefore prove useful to a broad range of readers:
In order to serve all of these readers, "Ajax Security" spends a few chapters establishing the basics of traditional web security. It's worth slogging through these chapters even if you think you're a hardened veteran. The authors get to their central thesis pretty quickly, during a discussion of the "attack surface" of Ajax applications:
Once Hoffman and Sullivan have spelled out this mission statement, the book kicks into high gear with chapters on the business-logic transparency of Ajax applications; the security vulnerabilities of JavaScript, JSON and even CSS; the risk of client-side storage and offline frameworks; and the security considerations of mashups and aggregator sites. I could fill an entire month's worth of blog posts with all of the individual tools, techniques and surprising facts in this book. Here's a random sampling:
Messrs. Sullivan and Hoffman do more than simply list the vulnerabilities of the Ajax programming model. They also conduct hands-on research into the ways existing companies leverage Ajax and offer advice about how to learn from their mistakes. Consider the following three examples: Reader Feedback: Page 1 of 1
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