All-in-one free web application security tool. Web application vulnerability and privacy scanner with support for HTTP cookies, Flash, HTML5 localStorage, sessionStorage, CANVAS, Supercookies, Evercookies. Includes a free SSL/TLS, HTML and HTTP vulnerability scanner and URL malware scanner.
Title: "Automoblog | Automotive News, Culture & Lifestyle Since 2006"
Description: "Automoblog is a grassroots automotive industry news, culture, and lifestyle publication since 2006. Car reviews, guides, advice, technology, and more."
Category: Automotive
Keywords: cars news april every share world google safety system looking reports reviews stories twitter articles facebook automoblog automotive interesting automoblognet
Privacy Impact Score is a score reflecting overall cookie-related impact of the website relative to other websites, primarily taking into account the number of third-party domains it reports to and number of persistent cookies it sets. See Privacy Impact Score article for more details.
Third-party domains is the count of organisations allowed by the webmaster to trace your across the site. These cookies may be set for various purposes, like tracking ads displayed on the website, collection of statistics, targeted advertising etc. This website allows 5 other websites to track your activity.
Persistent cookies are the cookies that are preserved through browser shutdowns. This means, even if you close this page today and ever return there in future, the website will know you're a returning visitor. This may be used for "remember me" features, as well as persistent user tracking. These cookies, especially if set by third party organisations, are powerful tool for monitoring your activities across all the websites you visit. This website sets 12 persistent cookies with average life-time of 219 days and longest 730 days.
Session cookies are cleared when you close your browser and allow the website to identify user's state — such as logged-in users. They are mostly considered harmless because they cannot be used for long-term user tracking. This site sets 15 session cookies.
Last fetched: 2020-04-21T13:10:59.422570+00:00
HTTP status: 200 200
Advanced user tracking and fingerprinting techniques are used by websites to bypass privacy protection in web browsers and increase tracking persistence.
b'GIF8' … b'\x01\x00\x01\x00'
b'GIF8' … b'\x01\x00\x01\x00'
Link: <https://www.automoblog.net/wp-json/>; rel="https://api.w.org/"
Indicates location of sub-resources for the given page, in machine-readable format. It may come in a number of types, for example next page, previous page, index page, preloading resources etc.
Read more...Referrer-Policy: strict-origin-when-cross-origin
The Referrer-Policy HTTP header governs which referrer information, sent in the Referer header, should be included with requests made.
Read more...
Referrer-Policy enabled
+1X-Content-Type-Options: nosniff
A non-standard but widely accepted header introduced originally by Microsoft to disable "content sniffing" or heuristic content type discovery in absence or mismatch of a proper HTTP Content-Type
declaration, which led to a number of web attacks. In general, presence of the header with its only defined value of nosniff
is considered as part of a properly secured HTTP response.
Fuzzy content type guessing is disabled
+1X-XSS-Protection: 1; mode=block
Controls an Cross-Site Scripting (XSS) filters built into the majority of web browsers. The filter is usually turned on by default anyway, but requirement to set the header to 1
became part of canonical set of "secure" HTTP headers. Over time, vulnerabilities in the "sanitizing" mode filter were found, so 1; mode=block
became the recommended value. Some companies decided that they don't really need a browser-side XSS filter to mess with their web services which are XSS-free anyway and they became consciously disabling the XSS filter by setting the header to 0
.
XSS auditor is enabled in blocking mode
+1Expect-CT: max-age=604800, report-uri="https://report-uri.cloudflare.com/cdn-cgi/beacon/expect-ct"
The Expect-CT header allows sites to opt in to reporting and/or enforcement of Certificate Transparency requirements, which prevents the use of misissued certificates for that site from going unnoticed. When a site enables the Expect-CT header, they are requesting that the browser check that any certificate for that site appears in public CT logs.
Read more...Strict-Transport-Security: max-age=0; includeSubDomains; preload
HTTP Strict Transport Security (HSTS) is an opt-in security enhancement that is specified by a web application through the use of a special response header.
Read more...
HTTP Strict Transport Security is enabled
+2Server: cloudflare
Announces web server software and optionally version details.
Read more...Transport Layer Security (TLS) is enabled
+2X-Frame-Options
header is missing
default-src 'self' data: 'unsafe-inline' 'unsafe-eval' https: *;
Content-Security-Policy
No base-uri
allows attackers to inject base
tags which override the base URI to an attacker-controlled origin. Set to 'none'
unless you need to handle tricky relative URLs scheme
Consider adding block-all-mixed-content
directive if your website is only accessible over TLS and you are certain it doesn not have any legacy plaintext resources. Otherwise you may add adding upgrade-insecure-requests
directive if your website may still have some legacy plaintext HTTP resources and you want them to be still available rather than blocked
The default-src data:
origin allows bypassing CSP and execution of inlined untrusted scripts
Origin default-src 'unsafe-inline'
allows bypassing of CSP and execution of inlined untrusted scripts. Use 'nonce-'
or 'sha256-'
instead
Origin default-src 'unsafe-eval'
allows bypassing of CSP and execution of inlined untrusted scripts. Use 'nonce-'
or 'sha256-'
instead
Want second opinion? Try Google CSP Evaluator.
The website uses the following advertisement publisher ids:
Most web pages load a number of sub-resources such as images, style sheets (CSS), JavaScript files, web fonts, audio or video files and other web pages in frames. Each of these sub-resources may be loaded from the same server (first-party resource) or servers belonging to other parties (third-party resources). In the latter case, the third-party will see a request coming from your browser with the information on the originating page and it can set its own cookies, both of which are frequently used for user tracking. Note that the cookies set by these sub-resources are already recorded in our cookie statistics for this page.
The page loads 7 third-party JavaScript files and 49 CSS but does not employ Sub-Resource Integrity to prevent breach if a third-party CDN is compromised