@TomK. Automated Web App Scanners are useful in their place but have a number of problems, like false positives and also the very very large number of requests they send to get a result. There's a place for them (if well managed) but I've got to say, most web application security testers I know do not use automated scanners as part of their work
well 2 things to watch, one is general load on the app (10,000's of requests quite quickly) and the other is, if you give it credentials to log in, it will (by default) try to fuzz every single parameter and form, so if you have any destructive functionality, that can end poorly
TBF in a well secured robust site it shouldn't cause too much trouble
well, all our apps are deployed on a productive, test and reference environment
so testing can be done in rather safe environments
load isn't that big of a deal there
and regarding "destructive potential" that probably depends on the app. but it's good to be reminded that the tests can be more "powerful" - if you will - than manual testing
@RоryMcCune I had one example like that - the page had a payment setup and the fuzzer completed the payment. It wasn't the expected test payment of £1. It was a few thousand...
to bring up something completely different: @AviD brought up a network of infosec people here. I'm relatively new in the field (6 months in) how do I get into one of these and is it even worth it at this point?
@TomK. LinkedIn is very useful - but generally people will only accept a connection once you have met them. OWASP, ISACA, IISP, etc are useful networking opportunities, both in person and via mailing lists
@TomK. I always encourage people newly into the industry to join at least one - it rapidly speeds up getting awareness and involvement in interesting things
yeah, maybe that came out wrong. It's not that I'm not interested, it's just that my (maybe not so up-to-date) colleagues didn't give my any good pointers so far
well, thanks anyway. I'll keep my eyes open. if you have any more suggestions, I would be more than happy to hear them. my professional environment seems not to eager to foster my development
@RoryAlsop I do not know how "featured post" work exactly, but the only "featured on meta" as of now is "Request for comment: Stack Overflow is hiring a Director of Information Security" on my side.