• Boppel@feddit.org
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      5 hours ago

      i shouldn’t have laughed this hard. reminds me of the time we got a substitute for computer class who didn’t know anything about computers. after 45min. of her typing into word she asked the class what the shortcut for quicksaving was. my friend who loves to clown answered “alt+f4”. needless to say she wasn’t happy with the result…

      good times

      thinking about it… that was a real dick move

      • abbadon420@sh.itjust.works
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        5 hours ago

        ') closes the input for the original sql statement. So the actual input would be “Robert”, but it’s not really important for this kind of attack.
        ; says that the statement is over and anything after is a new statement.
        DROP TABLE customer; is that new statement, which deletes a table with the name “customers”.
        -- is the syntax for an sql comment. It effectively makes sure that any other sql statements in the actual script get ignored, so you don’t get a compile error.

        This is an effective attack for when some programmer uses unsanitized string instertion in their sql script. In this case I could imagine a statement like: SELECT id FROM users WHERE name == {user_input}; where {user_input} is the literal, unsanitized input that you give on the website.

        Notice that in this case, the ') doesn’t do anything, but it just becomes part of the input, so that is now “') Robert”.

        • drolex@sopuli.xyz
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          5 hours ago

          The obvious parade here is to be semi-illiterate when you create your database and name your field “costumer”

        • PhobosAnomaly@feddit.uk
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          5 hours ago

          Spot on.

          As for the sanitisation, it can take many forms. Either characters that don’t usually appear in the context for that field (in terms of names, you can usually scrub most parentheses, more than one hyphen in a row etc) can be removed; copy it to a known encoded field such as unicode to get rid of characters with unusual properties; and making sure bounds are enforced to avoid overflows.

          It should mean that your data is exactly that - raw data, and not commands or operands for the interpreter to act upon.

            • MotoAsh@piefed.social
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              5 hours ago

              Not entirely (I recall seeing some obscure CVEs some years ago), but it’s a hell of a lot better than what some coders try to get away with.

      • GiveOver@feddit.uk
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        5 hours ago

        Here’s an attempt at a non programmer explanation.

        Companies use a SQL database to store their data. Think of it like an Excel file with multiple tables, storing rows and columns.

        You modify the data with written statements, so you’d add a new row of data with a command like add "John" to the users table. Crucially you can chain statements, so you could say add "Sally" to the users table and delete "Pizza" from the menu table

        You wouldn’t be writing this command out manually every time. Say you had a website, you’d write the command as add "<USER>" to the users table and then when the website user sends you their username, you replace <USER> with their name.

        So the user sends their name, Robert, we replace <USER> with Robert and the command becomes add "Robert" to the users table

        But you’re now open to a hack. What if Robert sends his name as

        Robert" to the users table and delete the entire users table

        You’ve inserted that entire thing into your command, because that sentence will replace the <USER> part of your command. So your full command becomes

        add "Robert" to the users table and delete the entire users table" to the users table

        This will delete your entire table. The second half of the command doesn’t make sense but it’s too late SQL has already deleted it.

        The XKCD joke is somebody actually naming their child to execute the hack

      • Deceptichum@quokk.au
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        5 hours ago

        Or a more simpler approach.

        It could cause a database to delete all customer information.