OWASP Top 10 Privacy Risks Project

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OWASP Top 10 Privacy Risks Project in a nutshell
The OWASP Top 10 Privacy Risks Project aims to develop a top 10 list for privacy risks in web applications because currently there is no such catalog available. The list will cover technological and organizational aspects like missing data encryption or the lack of transparency.

Introduction
Discussions about how to protect privacy and personal data are ongoing and mostly pushed by lawyers and legal experts. But there is no specific description of privacy risks for web applications that companies can apply during development and for users to check whether their privacy is protected well. There are helpful concepts like Privacy by Design, but no detailed description of real life risks causing incidents and privacy breaches in practice. This project will mitigate this gap and create a Top 10 list with technical and organizational privacy risks in web applications and possible counter-measures. Beyond that, we want to raise the awareness of the management and people who are involved in creating and operating web applications for privacy risks during the SDLC and the usage of the data, bring visibility to the right issues and create a community of people that gives practical input for further developement of this project.

Top 10 Privacy Risks
Under development.

Licensing
OWASP Top 10 Privacy Risks Project is free to use. It is licensed under the GNU GPL v3 License.


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Contact us

 * [mailto:Stefan.Burgmair@owasp.org Stefan Burgmair]
 * [mailto:florian.stahl@owasp.org Florian Stahl]

Project Leader
Florian Stahl

Quick Download

 * Method in Google Docs
 * Draft list of 20 Privacy Risks
 * Survey results


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News & Events

 * [20 Feb 2014] Project Start
 * [07 Apr 2014] Method draft
 * [04 Jul 2014] Draft list
 * [26 Aug 2014] Survey results published
 * [26 Sep 2014] Initial results presentation (IPEN, Berlin)

Classifications

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= Roadmap and Getting Involved =

Timeline

 * 20 February 2014: Project start
 * 26 September 2014: Initial results presentation at the IPEN Workshop in Berlin State Parliament
 * October 2014: Publication of v1.0 of the Top 10 Privacy Risks
 * End of 2014: Define a core team for improvement and further development
 * 2015: Further promotion of the Top 10 Privacy Risks Project
 * 2015: Improvements, development of countermeasures and version 2
 * 2015: Improvements, development of countermeasures and version 2

Participate
Some ways you can help:
 * Discuss with us in the Discussions and documentation section
 * Tell your colleagues and friends about the project
 * Provide feedback (feel free to contact us)
 * Apply the results in practice to improve web application privacy

Sign up to our mailing list to stay informed.

=Discussions and Documentation= To avoid overwriting issues we will use google docs for our discussions.
 * Method: https://docs.google.com/document/d/1nHM9LH2rP6ac3DvJ7lehDNb9qVP5YADOQGNEuiy5okg/edit
 * Privacy Risk list 2014: https://docs.google.com/document/d/1ufAuGtW42gUHtJF-9_VOzNZEegZJnMyqDcyfzmsjJeQ/edit
 * Draft list (already closed for 2014): https://docs.google.com/document/d/1WMljvy09nulPnzv5XkFc2uxn1bSR-ftKqx5VoayTzW8/edit



=Survey=

OWASP Top 10 Privacy Risks Survey
A survey was performed to determine the frequency of occurrence of privacy violations in web applications.

63 people participated in total. The survey was online for 3 weeks from 4 to 25 August 2014.

Here is a summary of the results or you can download the full report.

Part 1:

Q1 Do or did you work as a:

Software Developer		26.98%

Software Designer		12.70%

Legal Practitioner		 4.76%

Software Project Manager	11.11%

Data Privacy Expert		33.33%

Security Expert			66.67%

Public Servant			12.70%

Other				11.11%

Q2 In total, how many years of professional experience do you have related to privacy?

Average: 6.2 years

Q3 In total, how many years of professional experience do you have related to web applications?

Average: 8.1 years

Part 2:

The following ratings are between 1 and 4.

The possible choices for answers where:

[1] Up to one out of four web applications. (0-25%)

[2] Up to ev ery second web application. (26-50%)

[3] Up to three out of four web applications. (51-75%)

[4] More than three out of four web applications. (76-100%)

[excluded] N/A

01. Collection of data not required for main purpose

Average Rating: 3.1

02. Collection of Incorrect Data

Average Rating: 2.0

03. Collection without consent

Average Rating: 3.0

04. Problems with getting Consent

Average Rating: 2.6

05. Outdated Personal Data

Average Rating: 2.6

06. Inability of users to modify stored data

Average Rating: 2.3

07. Insufficient deletion of personal data

Average Rating: 3.3

08. Unrelated use

Average Rating: 2.7

09. Data Aggregation and Profiling

Average Rating: 2.4

10. Sharing of data with third party

Average Rating: 2.8

11. Operator-sided Data Leakage

Average Rating: 2.7

12. Insecure data transfer

Average Rating: 2.3

13. Web Application Vulnerabilities

Average Rating: 2.9

14. Insufficient Data Breach Response

Average Rating: 2.6

15. Form field design issues

Average Rating: 2.2

16. Missing or Insufficient Session Expiration

Average Rating: 2.4

17. Misleading Content

Average Rating: 2.3

18. Non-transparent Policies, Terms and Conditions

Average Rating: 3.2

19. Inappropriate Policies, Terms and Conditions

Average Rating: 2.7

20. Transfer or processing through third party

Average Rating: 2.6

=FAQs=


 * Why is this project only about web applications and not about any kind of software?
 * Web applications can easily collect data from users without their permission or informing them about the usage of their data. Trackers and cookies deliberately enable the monitoring of the users behaviour, often for selling those data. That is the reason why this subject is so important, especialy for web applications.


 * What is the difference between this project and the OWASP top 10?
 * There are two main differences. First, the OWASP top 10 describes technical risks, that are not primarily affecting privacy. Second, the OWASP top 10 does neither regard intended parts of the software like cookies or trackers nor organisational issues like privacy agreements or profiling.


 * Why should companys and other organisations be concerned about privacy risks?
 * Privacy risks may have serious consequences for an organisation, such as:

(Source: http://ico.org.uk/pia_handbook_html_v2/html/1-Chap2-2.html)
 * perceived harm to privacy;
 * a failure to meet public expectations on the protection of personal information;
 * retrospective imposition of regulatory conditions;
 * low adoption rates or poor participation in the scheme from both the public and partner organisations;
 * the costs of redesigning the system or retro-fitting solutions;
 * collapse of a project or completed system;
 * withdrawal of support from key supporting organisations due to perceived privacy harms; and/ or
 * failure to comply with the law, leading to enforcement action from the regulator or compensation claims from individuals.

= Acknowledgements =

Volunteers
The Top 10 Privacy Risk list is developed by a team of volunteers. The primary contributors to date have been:


 * Stefan Burgmair
 * R. Jason Cronk
 * Edward Delaporte
 * Prof. Hans-Joachim Hof
 * Florian Stahl

Partners

 * University of Applied Sciences Munich
 * European Data Protection Supervisory's Internet Privacy Engineering Network (IPEN)
 * International Association of Privacy Professionals (IAPP)

Sponsors

 * msg systems

=Project About=