On Jan 3, 2008 12:48 PM, Michal Zalewski <lcamtuf@xxxxxxxx> wrote: > Note that any person familiar with the dialog is unlikely to be confused > by this prompt, as a clear indication of the originating site, consistent > with the design of this dialog, is preserved ("...at > http://avivraff.com"). Might be, if the domain indication was more clear, and not at the end of the attacker controlled text. > As such, I would certainly not go as far as > recommending "not to provide username and password to web sites which show > this dialog" - that's an overkill. Just don't trust self-contradictory or > unusually structured dialogs - you never should. I think regular users would find it difficult to distinguish between a normal dialog and an unusually structured dialog. > Naturally, any person *not* used to seeing this dialog might be eager to > enter his credentials there, lulled by the tech lingo - but that's a > general complaint about browser design that is in no way specific to > Firefox; the same person would be likely to give out his password to: > > prompt("Please enter your password for foocorp.com (certified by Verisign)")'. > > ...simply because a systemic failure of browser vendors to provide > user-friendly security signaling and UI behavior (along the lines of: "as > far as we're concerned, any person with no understanding of SSL, HTTP, and > DNS had it coming and should die in a fire"). > Actually, the prompt is not a good example, as FireFox does show the originating domain in the title, and IE7 disables prompt by default. Though, I do agree that there are people out there that will be fooled by this too. --Aviv.