A browser exploit is a short piece of code that exploits a software bug in a web browser such that the code makes the browser do something unexpected, including crash, read or write local files, propagate a virus or install spyware. Malicious code may exploit HTML, JavaScript, Images, ActiveX, Java and other internet technologies. HTML alone is harmless (can only crash browser in some cases on vulnerable web browsers), however, in conjunction with malicious ActiveX or Java code, it can potentially freeze or crash a browser, or even crash the computer running that browser.
The term “browser exploit” can also refer to the actual bug in the browser code.
Browser exploits families
Cross Zone Scripting exploits vulnerabilities related to the “zone” concept in some browsers; i.e. a page in “Internet zone” is able to initate execution with “Local Computer”, “Local Intranet” or “Trusted Sites” zone privileges.
This guide is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia.
Video: Beef Browser Exploit Framekork on BackTrack
Leave a Reply