Report: 9 Out Of 10 Web Sites Have Serious Security Vulnerabilities
WhiteHat Security recently announced the availability of the third WhiteHat Web site Security Statistics Report, which highlights the top 10 vulnerabilities currently affecting organizations. Attacks on Web sites are on the rise, placing intellectual property, customer data and brand integrity at risk.
The WhiteHat Security Statistics Report shows that nine out of 10 Web sites have serious vulnerabilities that make the sites targets for malicious online attacks. Cross-site Scripting (XSS) remains the top vulnerability class, appearing in approximately three quarters of Web sites, while Information Leakage is the top vulnerability class of the overall population. New attack techniques such as XSS-phishing, Intranet Hacking and Web worms may force enterprises to re-evaluate the criticality of XSS on a case-by-case basis. A new addition to WhiteHat's report includes a comparison of vulnerabilities across vertical markets, including a review of Web sites from retail, healthcare, financial services, IT and insurance industries.
The report statistics were gathered through the deployment of WhiteHat's Sentinel Service, an outsourced service providing Web site vulnerability assessments on an ongoing basis. With more than six hundred sites under management, including many of the Fortune 500, WhiteHat has access to an unparalleled amount of security data, which allows the Company to accurately identify which issues are the most prevalent and also trend across major vertical markets. WhiteHat Security uses the Web Application Security Consortium (WASC) Threat Classification as a baseline for classifying vulnerabilities.
Since the last report in April 2007, there has been a noticeable increase in several technical vulnerabilities including XSS, Information Leakage, SQL Injection and HTTP Response Splitting, which can be directly attributed to the discovery of new attack techniques and the improvement in vulnerability identification technology. The report revealed that HTTP Response Splitting has proven to be a hugely misunderstood and underestimated issue, evading most scanning technology since its discovery several years ago. The overall results are startling both in the prevalence and potential consequences of HTTP Response Splitting exploits.
WhiteHat Security also examined the ways in which Web site vulnerabilities are plaguing various vertical markets, finding that while Web site security remains generally weak, the retail sector has been performing better than other markets. XSS tops the list of vulnerability classes by vertical, followed closely by information leakage. WhiteHat found that while the security posture of some industries is stronger than others, the difference is insignificant when it comes to a Web site being compromised since hackers only need to exploit a single vulnerability to cause damage.