ISC Stormcast For Thursday, May 17th 2018 https://isc.sans.edu/podcastdetail.html?id=6001

EFAIL, a weakness in openPGP and S\MIME

Published: 2018-05-16. Last Updated: 2018-05-16 02:38:25 UTC
by Mark Hofman (Version: 1)
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The next named security issue has hit mainstream press, EFAIL (https://efail.de/) .  You may be asked some questions about it over the next day or so. 

The crux of the issue relates to the implementation of openPGP and S\MIME and using HTML email formats.  It affects a number of products that implement these standards including Outlook, Thunderbird and Apple’s Mail application. There are more though. 

It you do not use openPGP or S\MIME encrypted emails, take the day off. This issue will not affect you. However, if like many people you do use email encryption this will likely affect you. There are however a number of conditions that must be met and therefore the attack is not straight forward. 

Let us have a quick look at how encrypting email usually works.  Alice and Bob want to exchange an encrypted email and they are both using either openPGP or S\MIME email clients.

The private and public keys have been generated, public keys shared and each email client has been set up correctly.  

  • Alice encrypts the email with Bob’s public key and sends it to Bob.
  • Bob opens his email,  he’ll be asked for a password to get access to his private key so he can decrypt the email.  

That is the normal process.

The EFAIL attack is taking advantage of a weakness in the specification on how that email is processed.  The result is that when an attacker has managed to get hold of an encrypted email from Bob’s mailbox, they can craft a new email to Bob, incorporate the “old” encrypted email into the message, send it back to Bob. Bob will decrypt this new message and inadvertently decrypt the old message.  The attack uses HTML URL to upload the decrypted message to a third party.  

  • Eve gains access to an “old” encrypted email,
  • Eve crafts a new email set up to exfiltrate the decrypted content to her server.
  • Eve encrypts the email with Bob’s public key and sends it to Bob.
  • Bob opens his email,  he’ll be asked for a password to get access to his private key so he can decrypt the email.  
  • The data for the “old” email is exfiltrated.

The conditions that have to be met are: 

  • Have an old encrypted message you want to decrypt, from Bob’s mailbox or captured on the wire. 
  • Craft a new email to be sent to Bob
  • Bob needs to decrypt this crafted message
  • Bob needs to have HTML message format enabled (usually the default)

The tricky bit will likely be getting hold of the encrypted message you want to decrypt, but mailboxes are compromised quite regularly today.  

Mitigation options: 

  • Don’t decrypt in the mail client.
  • Disable HTML rendering 
  • Update mail client (some vendors have already or will shortly be updating their clients)

EFAIL, a serious risk? Perhaps not for many of us, but could be used in targeted attacks. Based on your risk profile implement the mitigation options. 

Cheers

Mark H - Shearwater

PS if you need more detail, their paper is a good read https://efail.de/efail-attack-paper.pdf 

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ISC Stormcast For Wednesday, May 16th 2018 https://isc.sans.edu/podcastdetail.html?id=5999

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