I
- Identity and Access Management (IAM)
- Incident Response
- Industrial IoT (IIoT)
- Industry 4.0
- Infrastructure as Code (IaC)
- Infrastructure Security
- Innovation Product Design
- Innovation Product Development
- Insider Threat Detection
- Integration Testing
- Intelligent Automation
- Intelligent Process Automation
- Interactive Application Security Testing (IAST)
- Internet of Things (IoT)
- Internet of Things Platform
- Internet of Things Strategy
- Intrusion Detection System (IDS)
- IT/OT Convergence
XSS Prevention
Simple Definition for Beginners:
XSS prevention refers to the measures taken to protect web applications from cross-site scripting (XSS) attacks. These measures involve validating and sanitizing user input, encoding output, and implementing security headers to mitigate XSS vulnerabilities.
Common Use Example:
A website employs XSS prevention techniques such as input validation and output encoding to ensure that user-submitted content cannot be used to execute malicious scripts on the site.
Technical Definition for Professionals:
XSS prevention encompasses a range of techniques and best practices aimed at mitigating the risk of cross-site scripting attacks. Key aspects of XSS prevention include:
- Input Validation: Validating and filtering user input to ensure that it does not contain malicious scripts or HTML tags.
- Output Encoding: Encoding user-generated content before rendering it in web pages to prevent script execution.
- Content Security Policy (CSP): Implementing CSP headers to control which sources of content are allowed to be executed on a web page.
- Sanitization: Removing or neutralizing potentially harmful content from user input before processing or displaying it.
- Client-Side Security: Using frameworks or libraries that automatically handle input validation and output encoding to reduce human error.