networkworld.com — Web administrators beware: cross-site scripting vulnerabilities are now far more attractive targets than more notorious bugs such as buffer overflows. Buffer overflows have long been one of the most common types of bugs attacked by malware, with Intel and AMD even building in hardware support for an anti-buffer overflow technology.
Sep 18, 2006 View in Crawl 4
danisseSep 19, 2006
"Secutiry"? I couldn't get past the headline.
senzafineSep 19, 2006
Cross site scripting is only a problem when you include scripts from sites that aren't trustworthy. That's poor decision making...and that leads to many more security issues than XSS alone.
ghardingSep 19, 2006
Secutiry by osbucirty!
kayaktoSep 19, 2006
finally someone speaking about it - ok, three days ago as well
cyguySep 19, 2006
#1 Secutiry Threat: TYPOS!Seriously, do you how much development time is wasted by bad typing?
steven_Sep 20, 2006
#1 is File Inclusion Vun.