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Practical Attacks with DNS Rebinding

posted onApril 4, 2018
by l33tdawg

One of the tools I expect to see gain in popularity in the wild is DNS rebinding. DNS rebinding is a technique that turns a victim’s browser into a proxy for attacking private networks. Attackers can change the IP associated with a domain name after it has been used to load JavaScript. Since same-origin policy (SOP) is domain-based, the JavaScript will have access to the new IP.

This blog post outlines some of what I’ve learned while preparing a DNS rebinding lab exercise for Black Hat and SecTor.

There are two general challenges we must overcome to attack network devices:

    Attackers do not know private network address ranges ahead of time.
    Cross-domain access is restricted by the same-origin policy.

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