Name |
SaaS User Request Forgery |
|
Likelyhood of attack |
Typical severity |
High |
Medium |
|
Summary |
An adversary, through a previously installed malicious application, performs malicious actions against a third-party Software as a Service (SaaS) application (also known as a cloud based application) by leveraging the persistent and implicit trust placed on a trusted user's session. This attack is executed after a trusted user is authenticated into a cloud service, "piggy-backing" on the authenticated session, and exploiting the fact that the cloud service believes it is only interacting with the trusted user. If successful, the actions embedded in the malicious application will be processed and accepted by the targeted SaaS application and executed at the trusted user's privilege level. |
Prerequisites |
An adversary must be able install a purpose built malicious application onto the trusted user's system and convince the user to execute it while authenticated to the SaaS application. |
Solutions | To limit one's exposure to this type of attack, tunnel communications through a secure proxy service. Detection of this type of attack can be done through heuristic analysis of behavioral anomalies (a la credit card fraud detection) which can be used to identify inhuman behavioral patterns. (e.g., spidering) |
Related Weaknesses |
CWE ID
|
Description
|
CWE-346 |
Origin Validation Error |
|
Related CAPECS |
CAPEC ID
|
Description
|
CAPEC-21 |
An adversary guesses, obtains, or "rides" a trusted identifier (e.g. session ID, resource ID, cookie, etc.) to perform authorized actions under the guise of an authenticated user or service. |
|