Actually this would be a great presentation for the Flash/Flex group or the
CF group as well.

John Mason
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
770.337.8363

www.FusionLink.com - ColdFusion and Flex hosting
Now offering ColdFusion 8 Enterprise hosting
FREE Subversion hosting


 

  _____  

From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Dean H. Saxe
Sent: Friday, February 08, 2008 4:01 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [ACFUG Discuss] will Ajax go away (was JVM version and
ColdFusion)


If secure AMF is just AMF over SSL... its easy enough to modify in transit.


Darrin, if you or your organization wants a demo of why these things are
insecure, let me know.  I'll be more than happy to do some live web hacking
for you. (And yes, Charlie, I haven't forgotten about you and the meetup...)

-dhs





Dean H. Saxe, CISSP, CEH
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
"Dissent is the purest form of patriotism." 
    --Thomas Jefferson



On Feb 8, 2008, at 3:55 PM, Dean H. Saxe wrote:


*cough* BS. 

Flash can be decompiled.

I can watch all of the traffic.  Even over SSL. 

I can modify AMF (I'd have to look @ secure AMF).  

If you'd like to challenge me to hack the app, let me know.  I'm up for it.
;-)
-dhs




Dean H. Saxe, CISSP, CEH
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
"If liberty means anything at all, it means the right to tell people what
they do not want to hear."
    -- George Orwell, 1945



On Feb 8, 2008, at 11:52 AM, Darin Kohles wrote:


You can always build a Flex (or Flash for that matter) application
that can be put in you page as a 1px by 1px (I'm not sure if 0 by 0
will work) that has nothing on the stage with wmode="transparent".
This application can now act as your portal between the browser via JS
using the External Interface (or fsCommand going back to Flash ~6).
Then your "invisible" Flex/Flash app can leverage all the connection
types available (AMF/SecureAMF, Webservice, HttpService etc...) in a
manner that is not easily accessible to any hacker (you can hide all
kinds of security checks within this app).

I've always wanted to do a bench mark of this type of app side by side
with standard Ajax, but the bottom line is that the only browser
specific code would be in how the returned data is applied to effect
the client content.

On Feb 8, 2008 11:20 AM, shawn gorrell <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:



Charlie, my main issues with AJAX are dealing with cross-browser issues, and


security.



AJAX exposes some of the most annoying cross-browser DHTML sort of things.


Using libraries and frameworks can insulate you from that to a degree, but


not always completely. I've got a customer doing things with Google Maps and


we've had some differences between IE and FF that have been difficult to


solve.



People have gotten so excited about using AJAX that they have forgotten


basic security principles (things like validating input). I recently read an


article that discussed the security holes in the more commonly used


frameworks, so the issue isn't just with roll your own AJAX, it is more


pervasive.



But, those things said, ultimately I think it is a step forward in making a


richer browser experience (not as much as Flex though). There are just some


fleas on the dog that folks should be aware of in advance.





----- Original Message ----


From: Charlie Arehart <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>


To: [email protected]


Sent: Friday, February 8, 2008 10:58:47 AM


Subject: [ACFUG Discuss] will Ajax go away (was JVM version and ColdFusion)



That seems a curious statement, Forrest, and I'm sure some  would enjoy a


bit of discussion on it. For those who weren't following closely, he had


asked first about some challenges using a CFX_google custom tag, and in the


replies he was told that it's  quite old and instead Google favors some Ajax


APIs instead. Forrest replies he hoped the "Ajax thing would just go away".



So, do you realize that Ajax is merely a way to make browsers smarter? It


enables them to make calls to remote servers. Sure, we could do that in the


past with Java applets, ActiveX controls, Flash, and even plain Javascript.


And we could of course do it from the server using either REST or SOAP apis.


Ajax is just a simplified API to enable that very javascript-based


client-server interaction. For those who need to talk to servers from


clients (either because they can't or don't want to involve a server to


proxy the communications for them), we don't want them to go back to Java


and ActiveX, do we? :-) And while we may wish everyone would use Flex, it's


just not likely. Many will, for the much larger problem space it solves, but


for the average web developer, it's not really as simple as dropping in some


AJAX API calls.



If Google (or other vendors) want to create a way for people to connect, and


they want to make it work regardless of what web app server platform people


use (and as well for those who have no server), and they provide an


Ajax-based API to what (I suppose are otherwise REST-based) services, that's


seems to be just being smart, widening the pool of possible users.



Look at it another way (for us CFers), they (like Amazon, Ebay, and others)


could instead just document calling from Java, ASP.NET, and PHP. They tend


to not go that one step further to include CF. At least by their offering a


platform-agnostic solution that doesn't require any server-side processing,


they've helped more than just those who have no server to make calls from.



Just some thoughts. I'm not fanatical about all this, and I may well myself


be missing a point. But since this is the ACFUG "discussion" list, that


comment seemed one worth discussing. :-)



/charlie



-----Original Message-----


From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Forrest C.


Gilmore


Sent: Thursday, February 07, 2008 5:30 PM


To: [email protected]


Subject: Re: [ACFUG Discuss] JVM version and ColdFusion



Thanks, Charlie. Your comments were very helpful!



I have been hoping that this AJAX thing would just go away, as it seems to


be to be a step backwards, but it looks like it will be around a while


longer!



Forrest C. Gilmore


========================


Charlie Arehart wrote:


Forrest, I realize you've perhaps abandoned the effort, but I'll throw


out some clarification if it's useful, first about the JRE/CFX issue,


then about calling the google search APIs.



<snip>





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