Imperva White Paper Sample
SQL injection 2.0 threats impose a real danger to organizations that depend on the Web for information exchange with and for providing valuable services to their partners and customers. SQL injection attacks are constantly evolving, changing their shape and target. Relatively simple forms of SQL injection attacks are becoming more widespread through usage of automation tools and popular search engines, while advanced SQL injection attacks are being crafted to more seamlessly bypass built-in security mechanisms within applications and databases.
To protect critical business data from being compromised by SQL Injection, organizations should mitigate the known vulnerabilities by deploying a Web application firewall in front of their applications, and they should follow a regular code fix procedure for fixing the critical areas of the applications that are vulnerable due to some logical business flaw.