We found out that many TLS implementations are still vulnerable to different variations of a 19-year old Bleichenbacher's attack. Since Hanno argued to have an attack name, we called it ROBOT: https://robotattack.org
Given the new attack variants, we released a new version of TLS-Attacker 2.2, which covers our vulnerabilities.
TLS-Attacker allows you to automatically send differently formatted PKCS#1 encrypted messages and observe the server behavior:
In case the server responds with different error messages, it is most likely vulnerable. The following example provides an example of a vulnerable server detection output:
In this case TLS-Attacker identified that sending different PKCS#1 messages results in different server responses (the record contents are different).
Related wordGiven the new attack variants, we released a new version of TLS-Attacker 2.2, which covers our vulnerabilities.
Bleichenbacher's attack from 1998
In 1998, Daniel Bleichenbacher discovered that the error messages given by SSL servers for errors in the PKCS #1 1.5 padding allow an adversary to execute an adaptive-chosen ciphertext attack. This attack also belongs to the category of padding oracle attacks. By performing the attack, the adversary exploits different responses returned by the server that decrypts the requests and validates the PKCS#1 1.5 padding. Given such a server, the attacker can use it as an oracle and decrypt ciphertexts.
We refer to one of our previous blog posts for more details.
OK, so what is new in our research?
In our research we performed scans of several well-known hosts and found out many of them are vulnerable to different forms of the attack. In the original paper, an oracle was constructed from a server that responded with different TLS alert messages. In 2014, further side-channels like timings were exploited. However, all the previous studies have considered mostly open source implementations. Only a few vulnerabilities have been found.
In our scans we could identify more than seven vulnerable products and open source software implementations, including F5, Radware, Cisco, Erlang, Bouncy Castle, or WolfSSL. We identified new side-channels triggered by incomplete protocol flows or TCP socket states.
For example, some F5 products would respond to a malformed ciphertext located in the ClientKeyExchange message with a TLS alert 40 (handshake failure) but allow connections to timeout if the decryption was successful. We could observe this behaviour only when sending incomplete TLS handshakes missing ChangeCipherSpec and Finished messages.
See our paper for more interesting results.
Release of TLS-Attacker 2.2
These new findings motivated us to implement the complete detection of Bleichenbacher attacks in our TLS-Attacker. Before our research, TLS-Attacker had implemented a basic Bleichenbacher attack evaluation with full TLS protocol flows. We extended this evaluation with shortened protocol flows with missing ChangeCipherSpec and Finished messages, and implemented an oracle detection based on TCP timeouts and duplicated TLS alerts. In addition, Robert (@ic0ns) added many fixes and merged features like replay attacks on 0-RTT in TLS 1.3.
You can find the newest version release here: https://github.com/RUB-NDS/TLS-Attacker/releases/tag/v2.2
$ java -jar Attacks.jar bleichenbacher -connect [host]:[port]
14:12:42 [main] CONSOLE attacks.impl.Attacker - A server is considered vulnerable to this attack if it responds differently to the test vectors.
14:12:42 [main] CONSOLE attacks.impl.Attacker - A server is considered secure if it always responds the same way.
14:12:49 [main] CONSOLE attacks.impl.Attacker - Found a difference in responses in the Complete TLS protocol flow with CCS and Finished messages.
14:12:49 [main] CONSOLE attacks.impl.Attacker - The server seems to respond with different record contents.
14:12:49 [main] INFO attacks.Main - Vulnerable:true
- Hacking Tools Pc
- Hack Tools For Games
- Blackhat Hacker Tools
- Hacker Tools Online
- Computer Hacker
- Kik Hack Tools
- Pentest Tools Open Source
- Hacker Tools 2019
- Bluetooth Hacking Tools Kali
- Hacking Tools Online
- Hacker Tools For Mac
- Hacking Apps
- Pentest Tools Review
- Top Pentest Tools
- Hack Tool Apk
- Bluetooth Hacking Tools Kali
- Hacker Tools Windows
- Game Hacking
- Hacker Tools Apk
- Termux Hacking Tools 2019
- Pentest Tools Review
- Hacker
- Nsa Hack Tools
- Tools 4 Hack
- Hack Tools 2019
- Pentest Reporting Tools
- Hacker Tools Free
- Pentest Tools For Windows
- Hacking Tools Mac
- Growth Hacker Tools
- Pentest Tools Website Vulnerability
- Pentest Tools Open Source
- Pentest Tools Website
- Hacker Tools Free
- Pentest Tools Url Fuzzer
- Hacking Tools And Software
- Hacker Tools Github
- Termux Hacking Tools 2019
- Hacking Tools Download
- Hacker Techniques Tools And Incident Handling
- Hacker
- Hack Tools Download
- New Hacker Tools
- Hacker Tools Windows
- Wifi Hacker Tools For Windows
- Pentest Tools List
- Hacker Tools 2020
- Pentest Tools Url Fuzzer
- Hacker Tools For Ios
- Pentest Tools Url Fuzzer
- Hacking Tools And Software
- Beginner Hacker Tools
- Pentest Tools Subdomain
- Hack Tool Apk
- Beginner Hacker Tools
- Hacking Apps
- Hacking Tools Kit
- Hacker Tools Linux
- Pentest Tools Bluekeep
- Nsa Hack Tools Download
- New Hack Tools
- Pentest Box Tools Download
- Bluetooth Hacking Tools Kali
- Nsa Hack Tools Download
- Pentest Tools Linux
- Kik Hack Tools
- Pentest Reporting Tools
- Hacker Tools
- Pentest Tools Nmap
- Hacker Tools Software
- Pentest Tools List
- How To Make Hacking Tools
- Pentest Reporting Tools
- Hack Tool Apk
- Pentest Tools Website Vulnerability
- Android Hack Tools Github
- What Is Hacking Tools
- Hacking Tools Download
No comments:
Post a Comment