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Defending APIs

You're reading from   Defending APIs Uncover advanced defense techniques to craft secure application programming interfaces

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Product type Paperback
Published in Feb 2024
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781804617120
Length 384 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Colin Domoney Colin Domoney
Author Profile Icon Colin Domoney
Colin Domoney
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Table of Contents (19) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Part 1: Foundations of API Security
2. Chapter 1: What Is API Security? FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 2: Understanding APIs 4. Chapter 3: Understanding Common API Vulnerabilities 5. Chapter 4: Investigating Recent Breaches 6. Part 2: Attacking APIs
7. Chapter 5: Foundations of Attacking APIs 8. Chapter 6: Discovering APIs 9. Chapter 7: Attacking APIs 10. Part 3: Defending APIs
11. Chapter 8: Shift-Left for API Security 12. Chapter 9: Defending against Common Vulnerabilities 13. Chapter 10: Securing Your Frameworks and Languages 14. Chapter 11: Shield Right for APIs with Runtime Protection 15. Chapter 12: Securing Microservices 16. Chapter 13: Implementing an API Security Strategy 17. Index 18. Other Books You May Enjoy

Data vulnerabilities

Data vulnerabilities are one of the most significant weaknesses impacting API security, with nearly all breaches involving data leakage to some extent. For API defenders, the good news is that it is a vulnerability class that can be defended using some core principles and techniques.

Let us start our journey by understanding how data propagates through an API from the request, via the API layer, then the database layer, where it will be persisted to a database storage layer. A response follows the reverse flow: data is accessed from the database via the database layer, processed by the API layer, and returned to the user or client in the response.

This is summarized in the following simplified architecture diagram:

Figure 9.3 – Typical API data controller model

Figure 9.3 – Typical API data controller model

There are three data processing layers, each with its own data object:

  • Data input object: This is the native input format data received in the API request...
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