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Access control enforces policy such that users cannot act outside of their intended permissions. Failures typically lead to unauthorized information disclosure, modification, or destruction of all data or performing a business function outside the user's limits. Common access control vulnerabilities include:

  • Violation of the principle of least privilege or deny by default, where access should only be granted for particular capabilities, roles, or users, but is available to anyone.

  • Bypassing access control checks by modifying the URL (parameter tampering or force browsing), internal application state, or the HTML page, or by using an attack tool modifying API requests.

  • Permitting viewing or editing someone else's account, by providing its unique identifier (insecure direct object references)

  • Accessing API with missing access controls for POST, PUT and DELETE.

  • Elevation of privilege. Acting as a user without being logged in or acting as an admin when logged in as a user.

  • Metadata manipulation, such as replaying or tampering with a JSON Web Token (JWT) access control token, or a cookie or hidden field manipulated to elevate privileges or abusing JWT invalidation.

  • CORS misconfiguration allows API access from unauthorized/untrusted origins.

  • Force browsing to authenticated pages as an unauthenticated user or to privileged pages as a standard user.

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