Stories
Slash Boxes
Comments

News for nerds, stuff that matters

Slashdot Log In

Log In

Create Account  |  Retrieve Password

AJAX May Be Considered Harmful

Posted by Zonk on Sat Jan 06, 2007 04:19 PM
from the web-20-needs-vitamins dept.
87C751 writes "Security lists are abuzz about a presentation from the 23C3 conference, which details a fundamental design flaw in Javascript. The technique, called Prototype Hijacking, allows an attacker to redefine any feature of Javascript. The paper is called 'Subverting AJAX' (pdf), and outlines a possible Web Worm that lives in the very fabric of Web 2.0 and could kill the Web as we know it."
+ -
story

Related Stories

[+] Developers: Experts Say Ajax Not Inherently Insecure 82 comments
An anonymous reader writes "Jeremiah Grossman (CTO of WhiteHat Security) has published Myth-Busting - an article dismissing the hyped-up claims that AJAX is insecure. He says: 'The hype surrounding AJAX and security risks is hard to miss. Supposedly, this hot new technology responsible for compelling web-based applications like Gmail and Google Maps harbors a dark secret that opens the door to malicious hackers. Not exactly true ... Word on the cyber-street is that AJAX is the harbinger of larger attack surfaces, increased complexity, fake requests, denial of service, deadly cross-site scripting (XSS) , reliance on client-side security, and more. In reality, these issues existed well before AJAX. And, the recommended security best practices remain unchanged.'"
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.
The Fine Print: The following comments are owned by whoever posted them. We are not responsible for them in any way.
 Full
 Abbreviated
 Hidden
More
Loading... please wait.
  • first post (Score:5, Funny)

    by Anonymous Coward on Saturday January 06 2007, @04:21PM (#17491204)
    So can I hijack slashdot to always get the first post?
    • re: first post (Score:4, Interesting)

      by jimbojw (1010949) <wilson...jim...r@@@gmail...com> on Sunday January 07 2007, @02:08AM (#17495424) Homepage
      You might - if you can find an available XSS vulnerability to use as a vector. TFA assumes this blithely for the sake of demonstration, but it's a big assumption.

      Further, the slashdot summary suggests that Prototyping is a design flaw in JavaScript/ECMAScript. This wrong for two reasons:
      1. The article doesn't mention this.
      2. Prototyping is not a design flaw.
      Prototyping is a very useful language feature that can be used to do all sorts of things that would otherwise be cumbersome or impossible. Ruby is a prototyped language - a feature which is responsible for much of the 'magic' of Rails.

      The article does outline a number of Ajax related vulnerabilities, but like most vulnerabilities, they can be mitigated or avoided entirely if paid attention to - much like the SQL injections of old.

      Arguing that Prototyping or Ajax makes JavaScript unsafe is fud. These are powerful language features that (like any powerful feature) can be used for evil if an injection mechanism is available.
      • Re: first post (Score:5, Insightful)

        by Crayon Kid (700279) on Sunday January 07 2007, @08:03AM (#17496950)
        [..]if an injection mechanism is available.
        Therein lies the cruft of the issue. XSS is the culprit, not Ajax, not prototyping, not JavaScript itself. It all comes down to incompetent developers allowing visitors to inject JavaScript that other visitors will execute. Period. Once custom JS is executed all bets are off, assume the worst.

        This is an extremely basic point in security of any kind: once the attacker is executing code inside your system, that's bad. Nevermind that fact that other limiting factors will mitigate the range of the attack (browser-only for JavaScript, account-permissions-only for other attacks). Most efforts should be made to prevent intrusion, not to limit damage after the attacker is "in".
  • by mobby_6kl (668092) on Saturday January 06 2007, @04:21PM (#17491208)
    Not surprising considering that slashdot is slowly trying to AJAXify itself...
  • by JoshJ (1009085) on Saturday January 06 2007, @04:22PM (#17491216) Journal
    Javascript vulnerabilities will stop people from using AJAX just like Word vulnerabilities will stop people from using Microsoft Office.
    • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

      Well, ever since Word 97, there have been features intended to let the user disable auto-running macros. That's also been the default. This is not really a problem, as most Word files should not contain macros. Even if they do, most files are still useful without them, and are probably used within the context of a controlled intranet (with code signing in place). If the view that Javascript is inherently impossible to make secure would gain ground, AJAX would go the way of ActiveX controls.

      Now, I know you

  • Web 2.0.1 (Score:5, Funny)

    by ticklish2day (575989) on Saturday January 06 2007, @04:23PM (#17491226)
    Patch the hole and release Web 2.0.1. Good thing there's already a Web 3.0 [alistapart.com] in the works.
    • Not even! Microsoft just released Internet 7.0. All you Mozilla fanboys need to catch up with the times and replace your kiddy 'nix boxes with the new Vista.

      </joke>
  • by Sloan47 (977340) on Saturday January 06 2007, @04:27PM (#17491262)
    "...and could kill the Web as we know it." Oh come on! Isn't that exaggerating a tad? Obviously with some browser patches and more secure server code, the problem is solved. Gotta love sensationalism!
  • notabug (Score:3, Insightful)

    by QuoteMstr (55051) <dan.colascione@gmail.com> on Saturday January 06 2007, @04:31PM (#17491290)
    This paper is absolutely ridiculous, and its author is scaremongering --- if you have access to a site's scripting system via some cross-site vulnerability, then you don't _need_ to subvert an object's prototype to change its behavior. If you're relying on client-side code of any sort, be it written in Javascript or C, for security, you're up a creek without a paddle anyway. Oh nooes, man in the middle proxy attacks! Oh noes, browser bugs allowing javascript to leak outside its security context! There is no security vulnerability in this paper that hasn't been known and worked around for years. I'm wondering what kind of agenda the author has in writing this, actually.
    • Re:notabug (Score:5, Informative)

      by coma_bug (830669) on Saturday January 06 2007, @04:56PM (#17491476)
      I'm wondering what kind of agenda the author has in writing this, actually.

      page 3
      This technique has been found by S. Di Paola and is called Prototype
      Hijacking
      . It represents the state of the art in hijacking
      techniques applied to the Javascript language.

      page 6
      This new kind of attack has been called AICS and has been thought by S.
      Di Paola and G. Fedon and developed by S. Di Paola.

      page 8
      Stefano Di Paola. Senior Security Engineer of proved experience, works
      since many years as an IT consultant for private and public companies.
      He teaches Database Programming and Information Security at the
      University of Florence. Since 1997 is a well known security expert; he
      found many of the most dangerous vulnerabilities in recent releases of
      MySQL and PHP. From 2004 his researches focused mainly on Web security.
      Actually he is part of OWASP (Open Web Application Security Project)
      team and he's the focal point of Ajax security for the Italian Chapter.

      He is the creator of http://www.wisec.it/ [wisec.it]

      Giorgio Fedon. Currently employed as senior security consultant and
      penetration tester at Emaze Networks S.p.a, delivers code auditing,
      Forensic and Log analysis, Malware Analysis and complex Penetration
      Testing services to some of the most important Companies, Banks and
      Public Agencies in Italy. He participated as speaker in many national
      and international events talking mainly about web security and malware
      obfuscation techniques. During his past job he was employed at IBM
      System & Technology Group in Dublin (Ireland).

      Actually he is part of Owasp (Open Web Application Security Project)
      Italian Chapter.
    • by KalvinB (205500) on Saturday January 06 2007, @05:04PM (#17491554) Homepage
      JavaScript S on Domain A needs to access the server side script on Domain B. All S has to do is AJAX to a local bridging script which forwards the request using CURL,LWP, etc to B. The bridge then feeds the response to S. S has no idea that the AJAX request went to another domain. As far as B knows, A is just a web visitor.

      Since AJAX runs on the client side it's not possible to whitelist IPs and Referers can be spoofed.

      As with every client/server app the client can never be trusted.
    • Re:notabug (Score:5, Informative)

      by stonecypher (118140) <(stonecypher) (at) (gmail.com)> on Saturday January 06 2007, @05:11PM (#17491632) Homepage Journal
      This paper is absolutely ridiculous, and its author is scaremongering

      Try reading the paper before lambasting it. The stuff you saw in the slashdot article isn't in the paper. The author of the paper says things like "innovative new attack" and "next generation of server side injection." The stuff about end of the web as we know it is from the slashdot poster. The paper is quite insightful, and the author is almost blase about the whole thing. It's quite clear that he simply believes he's unearthed a new form of attack, and he's in fact quite correct.

      Please get off of your soapbox. You're wrong.
        • Re:notabug (Score:5, Insightful)

          by stonecypher (118140) <(stonecypher) (at) (gmail.com)> on Saturday January 06 2007, @06:22PM (#17492248) Homepage Journal
          Would you let me know what's new in XSS? All the paper describes are pedestrian ways to sniff info out of a site via existing XSS exploit.

          The thing which is novel in this paper is the delivery mechanism, specifically by fundamentally replacing parts of javascript to carry attacks in what would otherwise be quite clean and legitimate code. The only parallel I can think of is the embedded-in-compiler attack that was referred to by the Guy Steele era TNHD as "the greatest hack ever," wherein the foreign code installed itself into anything compiled by said compiler, including new iterations of said compiler. (By the by, I can think of several hacks I think are better; I just mentioned the phrase because most people know to what that refers.)

          And XSS is by no means new, or "fundamental flaw" of JS.

          I'm not sure why you keep talking about XSS. XSS prototype overloading attacks are just his first example of something you could deploy over his new attack vector. The paper isn't about the XSS attack at all. It's not the payload he's talking about, it's the delivery mechanism. You might consider re-reading. I mean, come on, he even cites someone named "S. Di Paola" (near the top of the second column on page three of the PDF) as the person who came up with the XSS attack he uses as an example, and the XSS attack starts right after the header "advanced example". Why are you suggesting he claimed that was new?

          As far as whether prototype overloading is a fundamental flaw of javascript, from the security perspective the current implementation most certainly is. There is no mechanism to identify whether a fundamental library feature has been replaced, or whose implementation you're using. There is not yet an existing mechanism by which an application can defend itself from this kind of attack; this must be defended against by the runtime environment instead, and there are not currently any runtime environments which defend against this sort of thing. Indeed, some of the JavaScript libraries I use rely on that those features are replacable (specifically prototype, moofx, behaviour and dojo, though I know of quite a few other libraries which do it too.) MooFX adds a ton of new features to fundamental things like Objects, Arrays and Strings that I use all the time.

          The same mechanism Moo uses to extend things could be used to extend bad things into place. The XSS attack is just an example. It's the extension he's talking about. It wouldn't be hard to "extend" a "logging" mechanism into XMLHttpRequest; indeed I did that once as a debugging tool. What if said logging mechanism logged to a foreign server? There are a million ways to exploit this.

          When XSS can occur, it's an implementation flaw of the browser and/or site, and by no means "fundamental" as it's usually fixed in the next point release or site update.

          You seem to have entirely missed the point. The thing this paper describes is an attack mounted by a malicious site against later sites in the user's browsing path, not an attack mounted against a site with a flaw. This attack leverages a flaw in current browser implementations of JavaScript in such a way that there need not be a flaw in the remote site, and it is neither possible for a remote site to detect or resist such attacks.

          The fundamental flaw is not in Javscript. It's in current implementations of Javascript. You are confusing mechanisms and targets. Yes, the target of this attack is other sites, but the mechanism has nothing to do with the target, and there's nothing the target can do. It's a browser-side attack.

          Fundamental would mean it can't be fixed

          Yes and no. It's fundamental *to* *current* *implementations* of the language, not the language itself. So yes, it cannot be fixed, *in* *current* *implementations*; it requires a minor new implementation strategy on the part of browser vendors. This will end up requiring a security patch to all browsers (and probably three to IE.)

          and if you BS detectors aren't screaming by his paper, you're more gullible than you suspect.

          Please re-read the paper. You seem to have missed the point.
          • Re:notabug (Score:4, Insightful)

            by suv4x4 (956391) on Saturday January 06 2007, @07:52PM (#17493008)
            As far as whether prototype overloading is a fundamental flaw of javascript, from the security perspective the current implementation most certainly is. There is no mechanism to identify whether a fundamental library feature has been replaced, or whose implementation you're using.

            Repeat after me: client-side, interpreted language.

            You're loading SOURCE CODE on a machine you DO NOT CONTROL.

            In other words, the fact you can "hijack" prototype methods is not a major discovery, since you can actually modify the actual *source code* itself, the classes instantiated can be replaced with other classes, variables can be read and written, instances can be destroyed and replaced.

            This is what "scripting" is about. If you don't like it and you're juggling with sensitive info on the client side, there's only one option: not allow XSS by carefully validating scenarios where this may occur (such as displaying poorly sanitized customer data on public pages).

            I guess some people still have some difficulty comprehending that anything in JS is subject to change on the client side.
            • Re:notabug (Score:4, Insightful)

              by tomhudson (43916) <hudsonNO@SPAMvideotron.ca> on Saturday January 06 2007, @08:39PM (#17493376) Journal

              I guess some people still have some difficulty comprehending that anything in JS is subject to change on the client side.

              A good example is writing your own proxy to fetch a site, then inject your own scripts into it before feeding it to your browser. Block ads, replace the body.onLoad() that calls a bunch of popups, rewrite all the urls, etc.

              Gee, maybe I should write up a fancy paper on how I did it, say its the "latest attack vector" or some other nonsense, and pimp myself as some 133t s3cur1ty xp3rt.

      • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

        Except that when you visit site B, the browser discards all JS from site A before going to site B. Site B never sees any JS objects from A anyway. Think of the browser-supplied things (e.g. the XMLHttpRequest constructor) as a template; if you modify it you just get a copy of the template for yourself.

        If touching prototypes of built-in objects would persist across sites there simply could not have been more than one JS framework system. And nobody would have had scripting enabled... :)
  • by levell (538346) on Saturday January 06 2007, @04:35PM (#17491322) Homepage

    Having skim read the article, it outlines how *if* you can execute malicious javascript for a website you can subvert the AJAX communication so that you can have man in the middle attacks etc.

    However once an attacker can execute malicious javascript in the scope of the target website you're toast whether you are using AJAX or not.

    I'll make a bold prediction and say that is not going to "kill the Web as we know it" contrary to what the /. article says.

    • Re: (Score:3, Funny)

      1. Prepare malicious javascript code capable of subverting AJAX in the domain it's installed in.
      2. ???
      3. Subvert their AJAX, intercept their communications, change their content, kill the Web as we know it, and ultimately, profit!!!
  • Crying "Wolf" (Score:3, Interesting)

    by flajann (658201) <flajann@li n u x b l o k e . com> on Saturday January 06 2007, @04:41PM (#17491372) Homepage Journal

    Do they ever learn? All of this scaremongering is numbing the uninitiated, and when there is a real threat no one will be prepared.

    Well, my BS meter pings off the scale when I see alarmist claims like "shutting down the web." How many of those claims have we all seen over the past years?

    I suppose it's the 21st-century equivalent of "The World is Comming to an End!"

    I consider that anyone who makes such outlandish claims should be remembered, indexed, marked, and noted. When their claims fails to come true, then we can all stand around and laugh at them and grant them Idiot Awards.

  • by Chineseyes (691744) on Saturday January 06 2007, @04:44PM (#17491400)
    A Worm that lives in the very fabric of Web 2.0 and could kill the Web as we know it lurks is the deep dark recesses of the javascript
    Who is this masked man known as the worm?
    Why does he hate Web 2.0 so much?
    Will this worm try to make us revert to Web 1.0?
    And does this worm have anything to do with disappearances of Web 1.1 through Web 1.9?
    This and much much more on the next epside of Days of our Web 2.0 Lives
  • AJAX != the web (Score:4, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Brave Guy (457657) on Saturday January 06 2007, @04:45PM (#17491408)

    The paper is called 'Subverting AJAX' (pdf), and outlines a possible Web Worm that lives in the very fabric of Web 2.0 and could kill the Web as we know it.

    Well, considering that AJAX is used on only a tiny proportion of web sites, and often not to particularly good effect, I'd say that's a bit of a silly claim. In any case, AJAX often suffers from the same flaws as pseudo-web technologies like Flash before it: lack of bookmarkability, breaking back buttons, etc. These are far more likely to doom it than any random security flaw.

  • solutions (Score:3, Informative)

    by fyoder (857358) on Saturday January 06 2007, @05:03PM (#17491552) Homepage Journal
    • server side: never trust user data.
    • client side: You're hosed. But if you're smart you already regard yourself as hosed. There have been security bugs where a maliciously crafted image could get you. Before going to shady sites you turn off java, javascript, and you would never even visit a shady site with IE. Turning off javascript might make a 'Web 2.0' site unusable, but it's a question of trust.

    If 'Web 2.0' comes to be widely untrusted, it will have to change or die. This doesn't represent any new threat to the web itself. The threats are old and because of their nature have been there from the beginning and aren't going away any time soon.

  • by Vo0k (760020) on Saturday January 06 2007, @05:10PM (#17491616) Journal
    Ajax sucks. Not because of security.

    The article Why Ajax Sucks (Most of the Time) [usabilityviews.com] is a nice spoof of an old article about frames. Despite being a spoof, the word 'frames' replaced by 'ajax' and little else changed, it's surprisingly accurate and nicely outlines WHY it's harmful.
  • by Trails (629752) on Saturday January 06 2007, @06:37PM (#17492396)
    As well as the dingbat mod who let this crap summary get on /. unedited?

    I hate all this crap about "ZOMG, once I can inject javascript into a page, something else makes it totally insecure!!!"

    Once someone can inject javascript onto a page, you're toast. The article itself is valid, and isn't complaining about ajax so much as prototyping (despite the title of the paper).
  • Meh... (Score:3, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Saturday January 06 2007, @06:41PM (#17492442)

    I'm a professional web developer, amd have been using XMLHttpRequest (ajax, if you really want) for the past two years in a large number of web applications. Having taken the time to actually carefully read (not skim) the eight pages of this document, I have only one thing to say: I want my 15 minutes back.

    This is a paper about more efficient ways of being malicious, but they only work if you can be malicious in the first place.

    You know what? If a malicious user can insert script to be executed for another user, I already have an unacceptable problem! I really don't care if that unacceptable problem is now 10% worse than was generally realized before.

  • by Original Replica (908688) on Saturday January 06 2007, @06:58PM (#17492598) Journal
    Damn Right! If you mix that stuff with a chlorine bleach, the fumes will put you straight in the morgue.
  • by Animats (122034) on Saturday January 06 2007, @08:24PM (#17493268) Homepage

    Nobody is explaining this right.

    JavaScript has a security policy. The security model is that 1) scripts can only talk to the site from which the script came, and 2) scripts can only alter documents from the site from which the script came. The security model is enforced only at a few points, notably the XMLHttpRequest object and at points where Javascript stores into the document object tree.

    Other than those few enforcement points, JavaScript objects in the same browser instance can communicate freely. This offers a number of potential exploits, some of which are listed in the paper.

    If the security model is tightened up, prohibiting all intercommunication between Javascript objects from different sites, "mashups" no longer work, so it's too late to tighten this up without breaking some popular sites.

    This is going to be hard to fix without breaking existing programs. Javascript has a very weak concept of what's immutable. It might work to mark functions as "dirty" if changed once loaded, then forbid "new" on "dirty" functions. That would prevent changing the base instance of a class without breaking too much else, and would fix this new vulnerability. But it wouldn't fix all potential vulnerabilities in that area. As long as multiple scripts share global variables, there's going to be potential for trouble.

    Maybe "https" pages should be locked down more. "Secure" pages should be single source - everything has to come from one specific domain address. No frames, no cross-site anything - one secure site per window, and no shared data with other pages whatsoever. That's a start.

  • Neuromancer (Score:4, Funny)

    by noz (253073) on Saturday January 06 2007, @08:40PM (#17493382)
    ... a possible Web Worm that lives in the very fabric of Web 2.0 and could kill the Web as we know it.
    My deck is damaged. I must break through the ICE! Where are my Yeheyuans?
    • Re:FUD? (Score:5, Funny)

      by ednopantz (467288) on Saturday January 06 2007, @04:43PM (#17491394)
      >(or was it written in FUD?)

      Ok, I propose we create a new programming language called FUD. Variables will be assumed to have their most sinister values and be impossible to verify.
      • Ok, I propose we create a new programming language called FUD. Variables will be assumed to have their most sinister values and be impossible to verify.

        Is that language derived from brainfuck?

    • Re:FUD? (Score:5, Funny)

      by monoqlith (610041) on Saturday January 06 2007, @04:46PM (#17491418)
      . (or was it written in FUD?)

      Sadly, no. The FUD compiler was written in Javascript, and was hijacked.
    • by cnettel (836611) on Saturday January 06 2007, @04:47PM (#17491434)
      Python also allows on-the-fly redefinitions, which is blamed here. Generally, the choice of scripting language is not the problem here. Most "Javascript" bugs translate directly into VBScript if you're IE-masochistic (or Perlscript, if you've managed to install that and trick IE into running the engine for it). The problem is in the DOM, what objects might theoretically be exposed, and how it's crucial that some part of the browser can access them, while others should not. After all, in Mozilla, the whole UI is held together by Javascript, running in basically the same engine, but a different sandbox. The situation with the IE scripting environment is quite comparable.
    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      The problem is that any other interactivity solution has to be universally applied, and right now there's a universal solution that's adequate, more adequate than instituting a ground-up rebuild, so anything in the future is going to be tacked-on to that. I suppose the best we can hope for is incremental, inside-to-out cleanup of the language, and, like CSS and "quirks modes" do, old code that breaks is switched to a legacy mode. Still, though, I think it's going to stay JavaScript, at least for the forseea
    • What we are seeing now is a push way beyond its original intended scope.

      Name a Turing-complete programming tool which has not seen this.

      I throw in the qualifier because, other than stuff like regular expressions and SQL, which are not Turing-complete and have blissfully narrow scopes, everything else has seen javascript-acular scope creep.

      Here, have an httpd written in PostScript: http://public.planetmirror.com/pub/pshttpd/ [planetmirror.com]

      Perhaps not being Turing-complete is a left-handed virtue.
        • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

          I could, code web pages, or whatever in assy if I wanted .
          What web browser are you using that has a built in assembler?
    • by pestilence669 (823950) on Saturday January 06 2007, @08:26PM (#17493282)
      JavaScript has gotten a pretty bad rap. I think unfairly. People tend to pigeonhole it as a "web" scripting language, which is certainly how it started off, but it's much more capable than that. Even Java started off as a "Web" language (with ambitions of world domination). Both have matured in the past decade.

      JavaScript has all the niceties of modern OO languages and more, because it's prototype-based. All that's needed is some discipline, because it also allows you to write exceptionally ugly code. Both Perl and C++ are the same way. You can drop into procedural hell any time you like. In C++, you can even resort to goto statements or drop into assembler.

      In JavaScript: you can have static class methods & members, encapsulation (private methods & such), multiple layers of abstraction, and features even Java can't handle, like: multiple inheritance, closures, reflection, and dynamic typing. Not to shabby for a crappy little scripting language.

      Any nice OO language (like Python, Smalltalk, Ruby) in a browser sounds wonderful... but it'll never work for very long. Do you really think that Microsoft could keep proprietary language tweaks out of their implementations? It happens with JavaScript all of the time. Netscape added proprietary features because it was THEIR language. AFAIK, that stopped as soon as it was offered up for standardization.

      Microsoft has continued to make proprietary "contributions" to JavaScript. If it weren't for them, everybody's JS implementations would work together in harmony. Microsoft alters their HTML, XML, CSS, and C++ implementations in ways that prohibit cross-platform compatibility (what a surprise). They'll do the same to Python.
    • Re:Greasemonkey? (Score:4, Informative)

      by JackHoffman (1033824) on Saturday January 06 2007, @04:49PM (#17491444)
      No, Greasemonkey exposed security sensitive functions to websites. They were meant to be used by Greasemonkey scripts but websites had access too.

      This is about the way Javascript implements object oriented programming: In Javascript you don't define classes from which objects are instantiated. In a nutshell, you create prototype objects and new objects are copies of the prototypes. The "attack" is to change existing prototypes. For example, you can add a new function to the String prototype or replace an existing function with your own implementation. Every String object then gets the new function. There is one problem with this: Cross site checks don't apply. A script from one site can't simply communicate with another site, but it can modify the prototypes that the scripts from the other site use and subvert the communication of the other script with its host.
      • Re:Greasemonkey? (Score:5, Insightful)

        by suv4x4 (956391) on Saturday January 06 2007, @08:09PM (#17493150)
        There is one problem with this: Cross site checks don't apply.

        You didn't test that and just assumed it's true I guess. But if they applied, and each page context runs in its own sandbox with its own version of String, Number, and so on, you'd sound pretty stupid right?

        Try it yourself, the prototypes are NOT shared. They are not shared even among two page tabs on the same domain.

        In fact not shared even among two instances of the SAME PAGE.

        Embarassing, I guess, for all modded 5+ claiming this on this article.
    • by Anonymous Coward on Saturday January 06 2007, @05:14PM (#17491660)
      I haven't read it either, but from experience, I'd imagine it hold up very well.

      AJAX applications just aren't solid or stable, for the most part. We tried to integrate a number of them into our network here, and frankly each attempt went terribly. I'd like to think it was just one application vendor or AJAX toolkit that was problematic, but that wasn't the case.

      We found a number of common problems with every AJAX application we tried. Just for the record, the applications included three CMS systems, a Web-based email system, two groupware systems, and three Web forums.

      The first major problem with one of resource usage, on both the client-side and the server-side. Client-side, many AJAX applications consume far too much CPU time. From our investigation, it was due to the use of poor JavaScript algorithms that'd consume 100% of the CPU in some cases, for minutes on end. The applications "worked", in that they'd provide the correct result. It'd just take them far too long to get it done.

      On the server-side, they'd again result in excessive CPU and RAM consumption. For one of the Webmail systems, we could only handle a fifth (yes, 20%) of what our old Perl-based system could. And that was on a quad-core Opteron system with 8 GB of RAM! The Perl-based system was on a couple of 200 MHz Pentium systems, each with 128 MB of RAM. Even after assistance from the AJAX-based Webmail system's vendor, we were only able to handle roughly 90% of the number of transactions of our older system.

      The second major problem is that of usability. Many of the AJAX apps we tried didn't play well with browser tabs, for instance. Some even fucked around with text input areas, resulting in copy-and-pasting no longer working. One application even prevented the text within a text field from being highlighted! We thought these problems may be browser-specific incompatibilities, be we ran into this same problem with Firefox, Safari, Opera, and even IE6! After talking with the vendor, they admitted these were known problems, and no solutions were presently available.

      The third major problem is a lack of quality. Many AJAX applications are poorly coded and poorly designed. I think the main reason for that is because it's such an unstructured technology. Even competent software developers run into problems that cannot be solved easily, and thus must resort to hackish techniques to overcome these inherent problems.

      The fourth major problem was that the users hated the systems. Of the few systems we managed to roll out successfully, the users absolutely hated them. Their complaints were a combination of the above three factors. The AJAX applications would not do what the user wanted. The AJAX applications did not conform to common practices (eg. copy-and-paste, textbox text selection, etc.). The AJAX applications ran far too slowly, even on fast client machines. The AJAX applications just plain didn't work!

      All of our AJAX trials were abysmal failures. That's why we're sticking with the existing Perl- and Java-based systems that we currently use. They perform far better on much fewer resources, actually do what the users want, avoid violating the most common of conventions, and they do what they're supposed to. I'm sorry to say it, but AJAX might just be the worst technology I have ever had to deal with.

      • by Zarel (900479) on Saturday January 06 2007, @06:42PM (#17492450)
        Have you ever considered that those could all be badly programmed? I mean, I could write a Java program that took tons of resources, ran really slowly, didn't allow text selection, and more. And I could write an Ajax application that ran far faster than the equivalent non-Ajax one.

        As for your specific case of a text field being unhighlightable, I suspect that has to do with the Ajax application using onSelectStart to disable selection within the page (sometimes as really crappy DRM, sometimes because click-and-dragging is needed for some other functionality), and not knowing how to re-enable it for the text field (which is something I, a 16-year-old, know how to do). Problems like the ones you describe are usually caused by vendor incompetence.

        Ajax, by itself, can't possibly cause any of the problems you describe. All it is is a system by which Web pages can interact with the server without needing to load a new page. This means:

        1. Less bandwidth is used because you don't need to load layout information for each page. Consequently, it's faster than non-Ajax applications.

        2. The Back button goes to the last page, as opposed to the last action, which is a good thing for true Web applications, since the Back button usually causes tons of problems (Ever seen "DON'T PRESS THE BACK BUTTON OR YOU COULD ACCIDENTALLY PAY FOR THIS PRODUCT TWICE"?).

        3. If coded to do so, the server can relegate translating raw data into a human-readable HTML layout to the client. This is usually done because the client usually has many processor cycles to spare, while the server doesn't. (This also doesn't take much processing power, and should be unnoticeable to the client)

        4. You have more control over page transitions, and you can have things like "Loading..." messages while the data is being fetched from the server (as opposed to traditionally, where the only indication is "Loading..." in the browser status bar and the top right loading animation, and then, when it loads, the page goes white and the new layout is loaded.)

        Those are the only differences. So, in reality, Ajax is superior in every way for Web applications, and the problems you describe are caused by bad programming practices, and would've happened whether or not they were written in Ajax.
          • by Zarel (900479) on Saturday January 06 2007, @08:46PM (#17493424)
            Sure. And the very "design" of AJAX encourages such poor development to occur. The fact that virtually every AJAX application is problematic shows that the problem is not with the developers, but with the technologies those developers are trying to use.

            Have you missed the portion of my post where I explained exactly what Ajax was? It's just a JavaScript library that allows the page to communicate with the server without clicking a link and bringing up a new page. How does that encourage poor development?

            And I have to dispute your claim that "virtually every Ajax application is problematic". I've seen plenty of places where Ajax is used effectively - Google Maps and GMail, to name two. Maybe in your experience, they are, but, as they say, the plural of "anecdote" is not "data".

            Now I understand why you don't comprehend anything about how ineffective and pathetic real development is when using AJAX. Come back when you've had to deploy a real system, jimbo. You know, where it actually has to work. If you brought up an AJAX "solution" at the firm where I work, the rest of us would laugh at your sorry ass for suggesting a technology that fails in so many obvious and integral ways.

            Care to give examples of these "obvious and integral ways"? I have deployed real systems, and they have worked, and I haven't come across any of the problems you've mentioned.
            • by bunions (970377) on Saturday January 06 2007, @10:03PM (#17493986)
              It's just a JavaScript library that allows the page to communicate with the server without clicking a link and bringing up a new page. How does that encourage poor development?


              By enabling development to occur at all. The program that is never written has zero bugs and is therefore the perfect program.
      • You've stated quite an amount of vagueness there, sir, not to mention this confounding statement:

        All of our AJAX trials were abysmal failures. That's why we're sticking with the existing Perl- and Java-based systems that we currently use.

        Very interesting, seeing has how AJAX has nothing to do with your server-side technology whatsoever. Or how about this:

        The AJAX applications did not conform to common practices (eg. copy-and-paste, textbox text selection, etc.

        Again very interesting, seeing as how AJAX itself has nothing to do with the way users interact with form elements.

        It sounds to me like either 1) you're BSing, which is my actual guess, or 2) your and your team have no idea how to actually code Javascript/AJAX/whatever, and you picked crappy packages off the internet and expected them to Just Work out of the box the same as your custom built solution.

        Your problems have had nothing to do AJAX; rather, they have had to do with either your lack of knowledge or your life as a Slashdot troll.

      • by misleb (129952) on Saturday January 06 2007, @08:45PM (#17493416)
        On the server-side, they'd again result in excessive CPU and RAM consumption.


        I'm going to call bullshit here. An ajax application is not significantly different on the server side than a regular web app. In fact, it is often easier on the server because the server only needs to render a small portion of the result for a given action rather than and entirely new page.

        The Perl-based system was on a couple of 200 MHz Pentium systems, each with 128 MB of RAM. Even after assistance from the AJAX-based Webmail system's vendor, we were only able to handle roughly 90% of the number of transactions of our older system.


        What does "perl based" have to do with it? You could very well have a Perl based (on the server side) AJAXy application.

        All of our AJAX trials were abysmal failures. That's why we're sticking with the existing Perl- and Java-based systems that we currently use.


        Bullshit again. You are comparing AJAX with Perl/Java based systems as if there was any comparison to be made. Saying Perl based systems are better than AJAX systems is like saying roads are better than cars!

        But thanks for you input anyway, Mr. Coward.

        -matthew
        • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

          AJAX is a great technology. Yes, if you overuse it or use it in the wrong places then it is harmful. Saying AJAX is unstable, unusable, brittle, impractical is simply an untrue generalization. Like anything else, if you do it right it enhances usability and is quite reliable.

          I'm sorry, but I have to disagree. AJAX is NOT a great technology. It's a perversion. It bends HTTP and HTML to do things they were never meant to do. And because of that, it's not really surprising that it has so many huge prob

          • Re:FUD (Score:5, Interesting)

            by bunions (970377) on Saturday January 06 2007, @09:14PM (#17493632)
            those 'gigantic problems' aren't problems with Ajax. There exist good solutions for both. The solutions, however, are nontrivial and are typically ignored by developers for whatever reasons.
                  • Re:FUD (Score:5, Insightful)

                    by hobo sapiens (893427) <cminor9@gmai l . com> on Sunday January 07 2007, @01:57AM (#17495370) Homepage
                    When it comes to sites using AJAX, such bookmarks are often not possible.
                    My. Goodness.

                    Look. It depends on HOW AND WHERE you use AJAX. Jeez!!! Can we please put this to bed? Yes, if you design a whole flippin site that is one page with a zillion AJAX calls, well, gee whiz! Bad idea! But, if you use your brain and use it only where it ADDS VALUE then maybe, just maybe, it's a good thing? You think? Just because beer is a good thing doesn't mean you pour it in your gas tank, use it to make Kool-Aid, or bathe in it. I am SICK (can you tell?) of people misusing technologies and then blaming the technologies! Stop it!!!
    • by Tablizer (95088) on Saturday January 06 2007, @05:14PM (#17491664) Homepage Journal
      Haven't RTFA yet, but I doubt it will live up to the hype.

      Which hype, AJAX itself or AJAX ending the world?

      Does Al Gore know anything about this?