Author Topic: Flaw in Outlook makes digital signatures useless....  (Read 3238 times)

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Offline iago

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Flaw in Outlook makes digital signatures useless....
« on: March 25, 2005, 01:16:35 pm »
... and Microsoft doesn't care.

Quote
On 10/21/2004 the following vulnerability was reported to Microsoft:

Security Flaw with Digital signatures in Microsoft Outlook -
Emails in Microsoft Outlook digitally signed with S/MIME using either a commercial personal certificate like Verisign or using a certificate issued by MS Certificate Server can be altered. Outlook will not show any warnings about the email being changed, the digital signature will still be reported valid even though the message content has been modified and parties involved in the signatures changed. This is an extremely serious flaw as I can change any digitally signed emails I want without Outlook ever noticing. After several emails with Microsoft and CERT during the months that followed, no fixes have been issued to correct this security flaw. It is only now that I am making this information public after all my attempts to have Microsoft resolve the problem have failed.

The following are 3 digitally signed messages. The 1st one is a valid, unmodified email from Roberto Franceschetti (roberto@logsat.com) to support@logsat.com: (follow the hyperlinks for the email's source and screenshots)

Screenshot at http://www.logsat.com/Signatures/Valid.gif
Email's source at http://www.logsat.com/Signatures/Valid.msg


The following one has been "hacked" so that the sender now appears to be "Hackers Franceschetti" (hackers@logsat.com). Note that Outlook states that the email is absolutely valid, and that the certificate is Valid and Trusted. This is most definitely not the case, as I've altered the original message to make it appear as a different person actually sent it. Imagine the scenario where a digital signature is supposed to unequivocally identify a sender, but now this email that appears to be sent by "hackers" appears legitimate, and a poor victim will trust it and send the hacker any confidential information he is asked for... (follow the hyperlinks for the email's source):

Screenshot at http://www.logsat.com/Signatures/Hacked1.gif
Email's source at http://www.logsat.com/Signatures/Hacked1.msg


This 3rd email is yet another variation showing how a digitally signed email can further be forget without Outlook ever raising warning flags (follow the hyperlinks for the email's source):

Screenshot at http://www.logsat.com/Signatures/Hacked2.gif
Email's source at http://www.logsat.com/Signatures/Hacked2.msg



The full emails with the conversations between myself, Microsoft and CERT can be found here (http://www.logsat.com/Signatures/emails.asp). I hope that by making this information public all the users who rely on digital signatures will be aware of this severe security flaw in Microsoft Outlook, and will take other precautions to ensure the identity of users in digitally signed emails they receive.

Roberto Franceschetti
LogSat Software
roberto@logsat.com

Reported October 10, not fixed.  I strongly recommend:
http://www.logsat.com/Signatures/emails.asp
"Following are all the emails between Microsoft and myself that show the complete unwillingness on Microsoft's behalf to acknowledge and fix the problem reported to them."

To summarize, Microsoft is saying "By design, you shouldn't be using digital signatures to verify the sender" -- then what exactly are they for? :)
« Last Edit: March 25, 2005, 01:25:20 pm by iago »