Cross-site request forgery
Cross-site request forgery (CSRF) is often confused as a vulnerability that is similar to XSS. XSS exploits the trust a user has for a particular site, which makes the user execute any data supplied by the website. On the other hand, CSRF exploits the trust that a site has in a user's browser, which makes the website execute any request coming from an authenticated session without verifying if the user wanted to perform the action.
In a CSRF attack, the attacker makes use of the fact that the user is already authenticated to the application and anything the client sends will be regarded by the server as legitimate action.
CSRF can exploit every web application function that requires a single request within an authenticated session, if sufficient defense is not implemented. Here are some of the actions that attackers perform through a CSRF attack:
Changing user details such as e-mail address and date of birth in a web application
Making fraudulent banking transactions...