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  1. Pentesting
  2. WEP-Pen
  3. OWSAP TOP 10
  4. Cryptographic Failures

Weak Encoding for Password

CWE-261

CWE-261 occurs when an application stores, transmits, or processes passwords using weak or reversible encoding instead of strong cryptographic hashing. This makes it easier for attackers to retrieve plaintext passwords through decryption, encoding flaws, or weak obfuscation methods.

Common Weak Encoding Methods:

- Base64 Encoding → Easily reversible with base64 -d or atob().

- XOR Encoding → Weak if the key is short or static.

- Custom Obfuscation → Can often be reversed with pattern analysis.


How Attackers Exploit CWE-261

1. Reversing Base64-Encoded Passwords

Many applications mistakenly store passwords as Base64-encoded strings:

import base64
password = "hunter2"
encoded = base64.b64encode(password.encode()).decode()
print(encoded)  # aHVudGVyMg==

Attack:

echo "aHVudGVyMg==" | base64 -d

Base64 is NOT encryption—it’s just encoding!


2. XOR Encoding Can Be Easily Reversed

A weak XOR-based encoding method:

password = "supersecret"
key = 5  # Static key
encoded = ''.join(chr(ord(c) ^ key) for c in password)
print(encoded)

Attack: If the key is small (like 5), brute-force is trivial.


3. Reversing Custom Obfuscation

Some apps use rot-based encoding (e.g., ROT13):

import codecs
print(codecs.encode("mypassword", "rot_13"))

Attack: Decode with the same function.


How to Identify CWE-261?

- Look for Base64/XOR in password handling functions. - Check JavaScript files for atob() or weak obfuscation. - Dump the database and analyze password storage format. - Test API responses for encoded credentials.

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Last updated 2 months ago