3 matches found
Mozilla: Cross-Site Tracing was possible via non-standard override headers
The Mozilla Foundation Security Advisory describes this flaw as: Cross-Site Tracing occurs when a server will echo a request back via the Trace method, allowing an XSS attack to access to authorization headers and cookies inaccessible to JavaScript such as cookies protected by HTTPOnly. To mitiga...
Mozilla: Cross-Site Tracing was possible via non-standard override headers
The Mozilla Foundation Security Advisory describes this flaw as: Cross-Site Tracing occurs when a server will echo a request back via the Trace method, allowing an XSS attack to access to authorization headers and cookies inaccessible to JavaScript such as cookies protected by HTTPOnly. To mitiga...
Mozilla: Cross-Site Tracing was possible via non-standard override headers
The Mozilla Foundation Security Advisory describes this flaw as: Cross-Site Tracing occurs when a server will echo a request back via the Trace method, allowing an XSS attack to access to authorization headers and cookies inaccessible to JavaScript such as cookies protected by HTTPOnly. To mitiga...