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So i am using the jQuery UI library to open new dialog windows, when the new dialog windows are opened I am passing some parameters like this

<a href="http://www.mysite.com/custompage.html?width=100&height=200&param1=abc&param2=http://www.anothersite.com&param3=custom3">open modal</a>

The site works fine and no issues at all, my custompage.html just picks up those values that were passed and they are being used on the page, something like this:

var a = customfunctionget(param1); var b = customfunctionget(param2)....

I just received a report that we are vulnerable to Cross-Site Scripting attacks by replacing any of the params with something like this:

><script>alert(123)</script><param 

Which I understand correctly what is supposed to happen but on any browser that I try to inject the script the alert is never displayed so the "script/injection" is not being processed, the custompage.html stops working as expected since we need the values to be entered correctly but there is nothing I can do on that respect.

Is there a magic pill that I am missing here? Most of the XSS information that I find does the same thing, try to inject an alert through a tag but other than me denying to display any content if the parameter is not well formed I dont know what else can be done.

Any recommendations, tutorials welcome.

2 Answers 2

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One of the easiest things you can encode all <, >, and & characters with &lt;, &gt;, and &amp;, respectively. Whenever a browser sees a <something> it thinks its a dom element. If you encode those characters, the browser will actually display them. This will foil people trying to execute <script>badstuff</script> on your site.

Note that people won't be able to do things like add <b> tags to things if you do this.

The above suggestion is a first step, but is by no means exhaustive.

I just found this, which seems like a good guide.

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  • So if I encode everything per your suggestion and when some one replaces a parameter with a script <script>bs</script> there is still nothing I can do, meaning anyone can view source and get my anchor tag, replace one of the parameters and hit the page directly. I am not sure how that is "protecting" the page other than just break as it did before since the parameter is not formed correctly Jan 25, 2012 at 15:29
  • also, wouln't the intruder be able to encode the scrip tag %3Cscript%3Ebs%3C%2Fscript%3E and the browser just ignore this "security". Jan 25, 2012 at 15:31
  • helmut yes, which is why i said "The above suggestion is a first step, but is by no means exhaustive." in my answer. Look at the link...
    – hvgotcodes
    Jan 25, 2012 at 15:34
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There is encodeURIComponent() function in Javascripts to encode special characters to avoid inserting scripts

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