Popular WAFs Subverted by JSON Bypass
Web application firewalls from AWS, Cloudflare, F5, Imperva, and Palo Alto Networks are vulnerable to a database attack using the popular JavaScript Object Notation (JSON) format.
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Background for this topic.
F5 provides application-delivery technology, best known in security operations for BIG-IP appliances and software that load-balance traffic, terminate TLS, route requests, and can enforce web-application firewall, access-control, and denial-of-service protections. F5’s NGINX products are also used as reverse proxies and web servers. These components sit in front of applications, mediating internet traffic and trust boundaries.
Their privileged position makes exposed management interfaces, insecure configurations, leaked certificates or keys, and unpatched vulnerabilities especially significant: compromise can enable traffic interception, authentication bypass, request manipulation, or access to protected applications, depending on deployment. Security teams should inventory BIG-IP and NGINX instances and versions, restrict management planes, apply vendor fixes, review iRules, WAF, and access policies, and monitor administrative and anomalous proxy activity. During incidents, preserve configuration and traffic logs and assess whether TLS credentials or backend routes were exposed.
Web application firewalls from AWS, Cloudflare, F5, Imperva, and Palo Alto Networks are vulnerable to a database attack using the popular JavaScript Object Notation (JSON) format.