An SSL implementation weakness?

Jeremey Barrett jeremey at forequest.com
Thu Aug 8 23:08:01 PDT 1996


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On Fri, 9 Aug 1996 pgut001 at cs.auckland.ac.nz wrote:

> The following weakness seems very obvious, I've got a partial writeup of this 
> but before I turn it into a paper or something and arrange a demonstration of 
> how it would work I thought I'd check to make sure (a) someone else hasn't 
> mentioned it before, and (b) it is actually possible (it seems too simple to 
> be true):
>  
> 1. Using DNS spoofing, stage a hostile takeover of an address (for example 
>    using bogus referrals set yourself up as the delegated server for a DNS 
>    subtree).
> 2. Get a Verisign certificate for an arbitrary company and set up a bogus site 
>    at the stolen address.
>  
> Lets say you steal www.megafoobarcorp.com.  People connect to this site (which 
> is actually your bogus site), Netscape (for example) displays the blue line 
> and non-broken key (which is actually for your J.Random certificate rather 
> than the real megafoobarcorp one) to show the connection is secure, and you've 
> just subverted their site.  

The domain in the server's certificate will not match the domain on the url,
i.e. the certificate will say www.eve.com and the url will be
www.megafoobarcorp.com.  Netscape does and should complain about this,
and that particular warning cannot be turned off.  Now it is quite possible
that the user will ignore the warning or not fully understand it, and 
proceed, but if the user pays attention to those sort of warnings, the
switch will be detected.

Now maybe if you got a certificate for a very similar domain name, the user
might be more likely to ignore the warning.


- -=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
Jeremey Barrett
Senior Software Engineer			jeremey at forequest.com 
The ForeQuest Company       			http://www.forequest.com/

   "less is more."
		-- Mies van de Rohe.

   Ken Thompson has an automobile which he helped design.  Unlike most
   automobiles, it has neither speedometer, nor gas gage, nor any of the
   numerous idiot lights which plague the modern driver.  Rather, if the
   driver makes any mistake, a giant "?" lights up in the center of the
   dashboard.  "The experienced driver", he says, "will usually know
   what's wrong."

		-- 'fortune` output

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