After reading about CORS (Cross-Origin Resource Sharing), I don\'t understand how it improves security. Cross-Domain AJAX communication is allowed if the correct ORIGIN head
I am late to answer but I don't think any post here really provides the sought answer. The biggest takeaway should be that the browser is the agent that is writing the origin
header value. An evil script cannot write the origin
header value. When the server responds back with a Access-Control-Allow-Origin
header, the browser tries to ensure that this header contains the origin
value sent earlier. If not, it triggers an error and does not return the value back to the requesting script. The other answers to this question present a good scenario to when you would like to deny an answer back to the evil script.
@daniel f also provides a good answer to the question
The purpose of the same origin policy isn't to stop people from accessing website content generally; if somebody wants to do that, they don't even need a browser. The point is to stop client scripts accessing content on another domain without the necessary access rights. See the Wikipedia entry for Same Origin Policy.
Just to add on @jcoder 's answer, the whole point of the Origin
header isn’t to protect the resources requested on a server. That task is up to the server itself via other means exactly because an attacker is indeed able to spoof this header with the appropriate tools.
The point of the Origin
header is to protect the user.
The scenario is the following:
an attacker creates a malicious website M
a user Alice is tricked to connect to M, which contains a script that tries to perform some actions through CORS on a server B that actually supports CORS
B will probably not have M in its Access-Control-Allow-Origin
header, cause why would it?
The pivotal point is that M has no means to spoof or overwrite the Origin
header, because the requests are initiated by Alice's browser. So her browser will set the (correct) Origin
to M, which is not in the Access-Control-Allow-Origin
of B, therefore the request will fail.
Alice could alter the Origin
header herself, but why would she, since it would mean she is harming herself?
TL;DR: The Origin
header protects the innocent user. It does not secure resources on a server. It is spoofable by an attacker on his own machine, but it cannot be spoofed on a machine not under his control.
Servers should still protect their resources, as a matching Origin
header doesn't mean an authorized access. However, a Origin
header that does NOT match means an unauthorized access.
You can't fake an Origin header with JavaScript in a web browser. CORS is designed to prevent that.
Outside of a web browser, it doesn't matter. It isn't designed to stop people from getting data that is available to the public. You can't expose it to the public without members of the public getting it.
It is designed so that given:
If Bob visits Charlie's website, then Charlie cannot send JS to Bob's browser so that it fetches data from Alice's website and sends it to Charlie.
The above situation becomes more important if Bob has a user account on Alice's website which allows him to do things like post comments, delete data, or see data that is not available to the general public — since without protection, Charlie's JS could tell Bob's browser to do that behind Bob's back (and then send the results to Charlie).
If you want to stop unauthorized people from seeing the data, then you need to protect it with passwords, SSL client certs or some other means of identity-based authentication/authorization.
After reading about CORS, I don't understand how it improves security.
CORS does not improve security. CORS provides a mechanism for servers to tell browsers how they should be accessed by foreign domains, and it tries to do so in a way that is consistent with the browser security model that existed before CORS (namely the Same Origin Policy).
But the Same Origin Policy and CORS have a limited scope. Specifically, the CORS specification itself has no mechanism for rejecting requests. It can use headers to tell the browser not to let a page from a foreign domain read a response. And, in the case of preflight requests, it can ask the browser not to send it certain requests from a foreign domain. But CORS doesn't specify any means for the server to reject (that is, not execute) an actual request.
Let's take an example. A user is logged in to site A
via a cookie. The user loads malicious site M
, which tries to submit a form that does a POST
to A
. What will happen? Well, with or without CORS, and with or without M
being an allowed domain, the browser will send the request to A
with the user's authorization cookie, and the server will execute the malicious POST
as if the user initiated it.
This attack is called Cross-Site Request Forgery, and CORS itself does nothing to mitigate it. That's why CSRF protections are so important if you allow requests to change data on behalf of users.
Now, the use of the Origin
header can be an important part of your CSRF protection. Indeed, checking it is part of the current recommendation for multi-pronged CSRF defense. But that use of the Origin
header falls outside the CORS specification.
In sum, CORS is a useful specification for extending the existing Same Origin Policy security model to other accepted domains. It doesn't add security, and sites need the same kinds of defense mechanisms that they did before CORS.
The purpose is to prevent this -
The ideas is that your bank's website needs some way to tell your browser if scripts on website X should be trusted to access pages at your bank.