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A code injection attack is when the attacker puts their own code into an existing data stream. This is often enabled because of bad programming with an application. An application shouldn't allow you to put your own code into a data stream. But, often, the code is not checked by the application, and attackers are able to exploit that vulnerability. There's many different types of code that you can inject. You can inject HTML, or LDAP, or SQL code-- and any one of those may be able to manipulate or gather information from a machine, especially if you have control over the type of code that you would put into that data stream. One very common code injection type is a SQL injection. SQL stands for Structured Query Language-- or SQL. This is a very common relational database used on many websites. If you can circumvent the web front end, then you can gain access to the data that's in that database. Of course, the web front end should not allow these types of requests, but if the input is...