Asi exploiting-excessive-data-exposure-in-api
install
source · Clone the upstream repo
git clone https://github.com/plurigrid/asi
Claude Code · Install into ~/.claude/skills/
T=$(mktemp -d) && git clone --depth=1 https://github.com/plurigrid/asi "$T" && mkdir -p ~/.claude/skills && cp -r "$T/plugins/asi/skills/exploiting-excessive-data-exposure-in-api" ~/.claude/skills/plurigrid-asi-exploiting-excessive-data-exposure-in-api && rm -rf "$T"
manifest:
plugins/asi/skills/exploiting-excessive-data-exposure-in-api/SKILL.mdsource content
Exploiting Excessive Data Exposure in API
When to Use
- Testing APIs where the frontend displays a subset of data but the API response includes additional fields
- Assessing mobile application APIs where responses are designed for multiple client types and may contain excess data
- Identifying PII leakage in API responses that include email addresses, phone numbers, SSNs, or payment data not shown in the UI
- Testing GraphQL APIs where clients can request arbitrary fields including sensitive attributes
- Evaluating APIs after microservice refactoring where internal service-to-service data leaks into public endpoints
Do not use without written authorization. Data exposure testing involves capturing and analyzing potentially sensitive personal data.
Prerequisites
- Written authorization specifying target API endpoints and scope
- Burp Suite Professional or mitmproxy configured as intercepting proxy
- Two test accounts at different privilege levels (regular user and admin)
- Browser developer tools or mobile proxy setup for traffic capture
- Python 3.10+ with
andrequests
librariesjson - API documentation (OpenAPI spec) for comparison against actual responses
Legal Notice: This skill is for authorized security testing and educational purposes only. Unauthorized use against systems you do not own or have written permission to test is illegal and may violate computer fraud laws.
Workflow
Step 1: Response Schema Discovery
Compare documented API responses with actual responses:
import requests import json BASE_URL = "https://target-api.example.com/api/v1" headers = {"Authorization": "Bearer <user_token>", "Content-Type": "application/json"} # Fetch a resource and analyze all returned fields endpoints_to_test = [ ("GET", "/users/me", None), ("GET", "/users/me/orders", None), ("GET", "/products", None), ("GET", "/users/me/settings", None), ("GET", "/transactions", None), ] for method, path, body in endpoints_to_test: resp = requests.request(method, f"{BASE_URL}{path}", headers=headers, json=body) if resp.status_code == 200: data = resp.json() # Recursively extract all field names def extract_fields(obj, prefix=""): fields = [] if isinstance(obj, dict): for k, v in obj.items(): full_key = f"{prefix}.{k}" if prefix else k fields.append(full_key) fields.extend(extract_fields(v, full_key)) elif isinstance(obj, list) and obj: fields.extend(extract_fields(obj[0], f"{prefix}[]")) return fields all_fields = extract_fields(data) print(f"\n{method} {path} - {len(all_fields)} fields returned:") for f in sorted(all_fields): print(f" {f}")
Step 2: Sensitive Data Pattern Detection
Scan API responses for sensitive data patterns:
import re SENSITIVE_PATTERNS = { "email": r'[a-zA-Z0-9._%+-]+@[a-zA-Z0-9.-]+\.[a-zA-Z]{2,}', "phone": r'(\+?1?\s?\(?\d{3}\)?[\s.-]?\d{3}[\s.-]?\d{4})', "ssn": r'\b\d{3}-\d{2}-\d{4}\b', "credit_card": r'\b(?:4[0-9]{12}(?:[0-9]{3})?|5[1-5][0-9]{14}|3[47][0-9]{13})\b', "password_hash": r'\$2[aby]?\$\d{2}\$[./A-Za-z0-9]{53}', "api_key": r'(?:api[_-]?key|apikey)["\s:=]+["\']?([a-zA-Z0-9_\-]{20,})', "internal_ip": r'\b(?:10\.\d{1,3}|172\.(?:1[6-9]|2\d|3[01])|192\.168)\.\d{1,3}\.\d{1,3}\b', "aws_key": r'AKIA[0-9A-Z]{16}', "jwt_token": r'eyJ[A-Za-z0-9_-]+\.eyJ[A-Za-z0-9_-]+\.[A-Za-z0-9_-]+', "uuid": r'[0-9a-f]{8}-[0-9a-f]{4}-[0-9a-f]{4}-[0-9a-f]{4}-[0-9a-f]{12}', } SENSITIVE_FIELD_NAMES = [ "password", "password_hash", "secret", "token", "ssn", "social_security", "credit_card", "card_number", "cvv", "pin", "private_key", "api_key", "internal_id", "debug", "trace", "stack_trace", "created_by_ip", "last_login_ip", "salt", "session_id", "refresh_token", "mfa_secret", "date_of_birth", "bank_account", "routing_number", "tax_id" ] def scan_response(endpoint, response_text): findings = [] # Check for sensitive data patterns in values for pattern_name, pattern in SENSITIVE_PATTERNS.items(): matches = re.findall(pattern, response_text) if matches: findings.append({ "endpoint": endpoint, "type": "sensitive_value", "pattern": pattern_name, "count": len(matches), "sample": matches[0][:20] + "..." if len(matches[0]) > 20 else matches[0] }) # Check for sensitive field names response_lower = response_text.lower() for field in SENSITIVE_FIELD_NAMES: if f'"{field}"' in response_lower or f"'{field}'" in response_lower: findings.append({ "endpoint": endpoint, "type": "sensitive_field", "field_name": field }) return findings # Scan all endpoint responses for method, path, body in endpoints_to_test: resp = requests.request(method, f"{BASE_URL}{path}", headers=headers, json=body) if resp.status_code == 200: findings = scan_response(f"{method} {path}", resp.text) for f in findings: print(f"[FINDING] {f['endpoint']}: {f['type']} - {f.get('pattern', f.get('field_name'))}")
Step 3: Compare UI Display vs API Response
# Fields the UI shows (observed from the frontend application) ui_displayed_fields = { "/users/me": {"name", "email", "avatar_url", "role"}, "/users/me/orders": {"order_id", "date", "status", "total"}, "/products": {"id", "name", "price", "image_url", "description"}, } # Fields the API actually returns for method, path, body in endpoints_to_test: resp = requests.request(method, f"{BASE_URL}{path}", headers=headers, json=body) if resp.status_code == 200: data = resp.json() if isinstance(data, list): actual_fields = set(data[0].keys()) if data else set() elif isinstance(data, dict): # Handle paginated responses items_key = next((k for k in data if isinstance(data[k], list)), None) if items_key and data[items_key]: actual_fields = set(data[items_key][0].keys()) else: actual_fields = set(data.keys()) else: continue expected = ui_displayed_fields.get(path, set()) excess = actual_fields - expected if excess: print(f"\n{method} {path} - EXCESS FIELDS (not shown in UI):") for field in sorted(excess): print(f" - {field}")
Step 4: Test User Object Exposure in Related Endpoints
# Many APIs embed full user objects in responses for orders, comments, etc. endpoints_with_user_objects = [ "/orders", # Each order may include full seller/buyer profile "/comments", # Comments may include full author profile "/reviews", # Reviews may expose reviewer details "/transactions", # Transactions may include counterparty info "/team/members", # Team listing may expose excessive member data ] for path in endpoints_with_user_objects: resp = requests.get(f"{BASE_URL}{path}", headers=headers) if resp.status_code == 200: text = resp.text # Check for user data leakage in nested objects user_fields_found = [] for field in ["password_hash", "last_login_ip", "mfa_enabled", "phone_number", "date_of_birth", "ssn", "internal_notes", "salary", "address"]: if f'"{field}"' in text: user_fields_found.append(field) if user_fields_found: print(f"[EXCESSIVE] {path} exposes user fields: {user_fields_found}")
Step 5: GraphQL Over-Fetching Analysis
# GraphQL allows clients to request any available field GRAPHQL_URL = f"{BASE_URL}/graphql" # Introspection query to discover all fields on User type introspection = { "query": """ { __type(name: "User") { fields { name type { name kind } } } } """ } resp = requests.post(GRAPHQL_URL, headers=headers, json=introspection) if resp.status_code == 200: fields = resp.json().get("data", {}).get("__type", {}).get("fields", []) print("Available User fields via GraphQL:") for f in fields: sensitivity = "SENSITIVE" if f["name"] in SENSITIVE_FIELD_NAMES else "normal" print(f" {f['name']} ({f['type']['name']}) [{sensitivity}]") # Try to query sensitive fields sensitive_query = { "query": """ query { users { id email passwordHash socialSecurityNumber internalNotes lastLoginIp mfaSecret apiKey } } """ } resp = requests.post(GRAPHQL_URL, headers=headers, json=sensitive_query) if resp.status_code == 200 and "errors" not in resp.json(): print("[CRITICAL] GraphQL exposes sensitive user fields without restriction")
Step 6: Debug and Internal Data Leakage
# Test for debug information in responses debug_headers_to_check = [ "X-Debug-Token", "X-Debug-Info", "Server", "X-Powered-By", "X-Request-Id", "X-Correlation-Id", "X-Backend-Server", "X-Runtime", "X-Version", "X-Build-Version" ] resp = requests.get(f"{BASE_URL}/users/me", headers=headers) for h in debug_headers_to_check: if h.lower() in {k.lower(): v for k, v in resp.headers.items()}: print(f"[INFO LEAK] Header {h}: {resp.headers.get(h)}") # Test error responses for stack traces error_payloads = [ ("GET", "/users/invalid-id-format", None), ("POST", "/orders", {"invalid": "payload"}), ("GET", "/users/-1", None), ("GET", "/users/0", None), ] for method, path, body in error_payloads: resp = requests.request(method, f"{BASE_URL}{path}", headers=headers, json=body) if resp.status_code >= 400: text = resp.text.lower() if any(kw in text for kw in ["stack trace", "traceback", "at com.", "at org.", "file \"", "line ", "exception", "sql", "query"]): print(f"[DEBUG LEAK] {method} {path} -> {resp.status_code}: Contains stack trace or query info")
Key Concepts
| Term | Definition |
|---|---|
| Excessive Data Exposure | API returns more data fields than the client needs, relying on frontend filtering to hide sensitive information from users |
| Over-Fetching | Requesting or receiving more data than needed for a specific operation, common in REST APIs that return fixed response schemas |
| Response Filtering | Client-side filtering of API response data to display only relevant fields, which provides zero security since the full response is interceptable |
| Object Property Level Authorization | OWASP API3:2023 - ensuring that users can only read/write object properties they are authorized to access |
| PII Leakage | Unintended exposure of Personally Identifiable Information in API responses including names, emails, addresses, SSNs, or financial data |
| Schema Validation | Enforcing that API responses conform to a defined schema, stripping unauthorized fields before transmission |
Tools & Systems
- Burp Suite Professional: Intercept API responses and use the Comparer tool to diff expected vs actual response schemas
- mitmproxy: Scriptable proxy for automated response analysis with Python-based content inspection scripts
- OWASP ZAP: Passive scanner detects information disclosure in headers, error messages, and response bodies
- Postman: Compare documented response schemas against actual API responses using test scripts
- jq: Command-line JSON processor for extracting and analyzing specific fields from API responses
Common Scenarios
Scenario: Mobile Banking API Data Exposure Assessment
Context: A mobile banking application's API returns full account objects to the mobile client, which only displays account nickname and balance. The API is accessed by both iOS and Android apps and a web portal.
Approach:
- Configure mitmproxy on a test device and authenticate as the test user
- Capture all API responses during a complete user session (login, view accounts, transfer, logout)
- Analyze
response: UI shows 4 fields but API returns 23 fieldsGET /api/v1/accounts - Discover that the API returns
,routing_number
,account_holder_ssn_last4
,internal_risk_score
, andkyc_verification_status
- none shown in UIlinked_external_accounts - Analyze
response: API returnsGET /api/v1/transactions
,merchant_id
,terminal_id
,authorization_code
fields not needed by the clientprocessor_response - Check
: API returnsGET /api/v1/users/me
,last_login_ip
,mfa_backup_codes_remaining
, andaccount_officer_namecredit_score_band - Test error responses:
with invalid payload returns SQL table name in error messagePOST /api/v1/transfers
Pitfalls:
- Only checking top-level fields and missing sensitive data in deeply nested objects
- Not testing paginated responses where subsequent pages may include different fields
- Ignoring response headers that may leak server version, backend technology, or internal routing information
- Missing data exposure in error responses which often contain stack traces, SQL queries, or internal paths
- Assuming that HTTPS encryption prevents data exposure (it protects in transit, not from the authenticated client)
Output Format
## Finding: Excessive Data Exposure in Account and Transaction APIs **ID**: API-DATA-001 **Severity**: High (CVSS 7.1) **OWASP API**: API3:2023 - Broken Object Property Level Authorization **Affected Endpoints**: - GET /api/v1/accounts - GET /api/v1/transactions - GET /api/v1/users/me **Description**: The API returns full database objects to the client, including sensitive fields that are not displayed in the mobile application UI. The mobile app filters these fields client-side, but they are fully accessible by intercepting the API response. This exposes SSN fragments, internal risk scores, and KYC verification data for any authenticated user. **Excess Fields Discovered**: - /accounts: routing_number, account_holder_ssn_last4, internal_risk_score, kyc_verification_status, linked_external_accounts (18 excess fields total) - /transactions: merchant_id, terminal_id, authorization_code, processor_response (12 excess fields total) - /users/me: last_login_ip, mfa_backup_codes_remaining, credit_score_band **Impact**: An authenticated user can extract sensitive financial data, internal risk assessments, and PII for their own account that the application is not intended to reveal. Combined with BOLA vulnerabilities, this data could be extracted for all users. **Remediation**: 1. Implement server-side response filtering using DTOs/view models that only include fields needed by the client 2. Use GraphQL field-level authorization or REST response schemas per endpoint per role 3. Remove sensitive fields from API responses at the serialization layer 4. Implement response schema validation in the API gateway to strip undocumented fields 5. Add automated tests that verify response schemas match documentation