# Parameter Pollution **Copied from** [**https://medium.com/@shahjerry33/http-parameter-pollution-its-contaminated-85edc0805654**](https://medium.com/@shahjerry33/http-parameter-pollution-its-contaminated-85edc0805654) **Summary :** HTTP Parameter Pollution (HPP) means to pollute the HTTP parameters of a web application for achieving a specific malicious task. It refers to manipulating how a website treats parameters it receives during HTTP requests. It changes a website’s behaviour from its intended one. HTTP\ parameter pollution is a simple kind of attack but it is an effective one. When you pollute any parameter the code runs only on the server-side which is invisible to use, but we can see the results on our screen. The process in between is a black box. For example, there is a URL https://www.anybank.com/send which has three parameters : 1. from : 2. to : 3. amount : **URL : https://www.anybank.com/send/?from=accountA\&to=accountB\&amount=10000** Now this is a normal URL which will proceed a transaction of 10000 from accountA to accountB but what if we add another same parameter **“from :”** So the URL will be like **https://www.anybank.com/send/?from=accountA\&to=accountB\&amount=10000\&from=accountC** When this URL will be proceed a transaction of 10000 it will be deducted from accountC rather than accountA. This is how you manipulate the parameters in **HTTP Parameter Pollution** attack. Although the scope of this vulnerability is not limited only to **GET** request you can also perform this attack on a **POST** based request. You can try this vulnerability on many places like password change, 2FA, comments, profile photo upload, on a parameter where API key is passed, OTP etc. When you manipulate any parameter, it’s manipulation depends on how each web technology is parsing their parameters. You can identify web technologies using “[Wappalyzer](https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/wappalyzer/)”. Below is the screenshot of some technologies and their parameter parsing.Technologies and their parameter parsing ![Image for post](https://miro.medium.com/max/1760/1\*POs4sP0fQVlPvTH9vw1U-A.jpeg) I would like to share one of my finding of HPP where I was able to take over an account using this vulnerability. **How I find this vulnerability ?** 1. I went to a login page of that program, it asked for an OTP for login Send OTP ![Image for post](https://miro.medium.com/max/600/1\*s-M09yWBylPVEhA6\_e0nSw.jpeg) 2\. I typed an email and clicked on “Send One Time Password” 3\. I intercepted the request using burp suite and added another email by using same parameter (I created two emails for testing purpose)Burp Request ![Image for post](https://miro.medium.com/max/1737/1\*z\_RpnZyKHLn6B4Lz4ONT3Q.png) 4\. I received an OTP of shrey……@gmail.com to my another account radhika…..@gmail.com OTP ![Image for post](https://miro.medium.com/max/784/1\*a671GrRtiMYfLUL7nURD8Q.png) 5\. I copied the OTP and went to shrey….@gmail.com on that program’s login screen, I entered this OTP and I was in the account.Account Take Over ![Image for post](https://miro.medium.com/max/1698/1\*Ux-ILfCr\_Mk\_xmzzsXwNnA.jpeg) So what happened here is the back-end application took the value of first “**email**” parameter to generate an OTP and used the value of second “**email**” parameter to supply the value, which means an OTP of shrey….@gmail.com was sent to radhika….@gmail.com. **NOTE :** Here in an image on 4th step where I received an OTP to radhika….@gmail.com I was confused because the message said Hi Radhika, so I thought that the parameter is not polluted and the OTP was for radhika….@gmail.com but when I tried the OTP on shrey….@gmail.com it worked.