<p>Eric,<br>
Look onto JavaScript injection and form hacks. I believe these two methods were required. I was too rusty at it to complete the quiz, but its a start. You can also have a peek at "<a href="http://hackthissite.com">hackthissite.com</a>" to learn more. (I hope I got that URL right...)</p>
<p>--Sent from my android.</p>
<p><blockquote type="cite">On Nov 25, 2010 7:35 AM, "Eric Beversluis" <<a href="mailto:ebever@researchintegration.org">ebever@researchintegration.org</a>> wrote:<br><br>OK, guys and gals. What am I missing? I thought I understood the key<br>
features of webcoding, including, in a broad sense, the security<br>
aspects. But all this talk about "hacking" the site confuses me. My<br>
understanding is that in order to change a web site (hack it), one needs<br>
to have access to the web server.<br>
<br>
I understand (in general terms) how one can send malicious data back to<br>
a server if the web page is not carefully crafted. But the discussion<br>
here seems to be about individuals somehow changing the page (and then<br>
changing it for everyone?).<br>
<br>
Give thanks today for the Internet and FOSS. And pray that Oracle<br>
doesn't screw up OpenOffice and Java.<br>
<br>
On Tue, 2010-11-23 at 14:31 -0500, <a href="mailto:kyle@virtualinterconnectsoftware.com">kyle@virtualinterconnectsoftware.com</a><br>
wrote:<br>
<p><font color="#500050">> Hi everyone,<br>> <br>> We have a job opening for a programmer/system administrator position, and<br>> buil...</font></p></blockquote></p>
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