This class is for AWT permissions.
An AWTPermission contains a target name but
no actions list; you either have the named permission
or you don't.
The target name is the name of the AWT permission (see below). The naming
convention follows the hierarchical property naming convention.
Also, an asterisk could be used to represent all AWT permissions.
The following table lists all the possible AWTPermission target names,
and for each provides a description of what the permission allows
and a discussion of the risks of granting code the permission.
Permission Target Name |
What the Permission Allows |
Risks of Allowing this Permission |
accessClipboard |
Posting and retrieval of information to and from the AWT clipboard |
This would allow malfeasant code to share
potentially sensitive or confidential information. |
accessEventQueue |
Access to the AWT event queue |
After retrieving the AWT event queue,
malicious code may peek at and even remove existing events
from its event queue, as well as post bogus events which may purposefully
cause the application or applet to misbehave in an insecure manner. |
listenToAllAWTEvents |
Listen to all AWT events, system-wide |
After adding an AWT event listener,
malicious code may scan all AWT events dispatched in the system,
allowing it to read all user input (such as passwords). Each
AWT event listener is called from within the context of that
event queue's EventDispatchThread, so if the accessEventQueue
permission is also enabled, malicious code could modify the
contents of AWT event queues system-wide, causing the application
or applet to misbehave in an insecure manner. |
showWindowWithoutWarningBanner |
Display of a window without also displaying a banner warning
that the window was created by an applet |
Without this warning,
an applet may pop up windows without the user knowing that they
belong to an applet. Since users may make security-sensitive
decisions based on whether or not the window belongs to an applet
(entering a username and password into a dialog box, for example),
disabling this warning banner may allow applets to trick the user
into entering such information. |
readDisplayPixels |
Readback of pixels from the display screen |
Interfaces such as the java.awt.Composite interface which
allow arbitrary code to examine pixels on the display enable
malicious code to snoop on the activities of the user. |