I know about common web exploits, like SQL injection, script injection, stealing cookies, etc. However, I don't know too much about security issues around desktop Java apps. What are good resources for learning more about this?
Specifically, I'm talking about Java apps that run on the desktop of PCs or Macs (not applets or servers).
Some issues that I can imagine for Java apps would be changing registry settings, installing rootkits, keystroke logging, messing with the file system, etc. Aside from the last one, I have no idea how one would go about doing it or if it's even possible, so I don't have a sense of how easy to implement and thus potentially dangerous it is. Also, if I understood how it was done, I could understand what if anything could protect against it.
I feel like the file system could do a lot of damage, either by deleting files, stealing data, changing settings for programs that store settings files, etc. I have heard that Java has a sandbox mode, but I'm not sure how that works in terms of running a program in sandbox mode, or how a program would know it's in sandbox mode.
What are some good resources for learning about this?
The Java platform has its own unique set of security challenges. One of its main design considerations is to provide a secure environment for executing mobile code. While the Java security architecture can protect users and systems from hostile programs downloaded over a network, it cannot defend against implementation bugs that occur in trusted code. Such bugs can inadvertently open the very holes that the security architecture was designed to contain...
...In particular, three long-known issues with the Oracle JVM around Calendar deserialization, long file URLs, and RMI connections represent an outsized portion of attacks.
... andJava developers often assume that their applications are immune to security holes because of the sandbox that the JVM supplies. But under the bytecode, the JVM implementation itself still has direct access to memory and is implemented in an un-sandboxed language like C.