On 26 February 2017 at 22:15, Patrick W. Gilmore <patrick@ianai.net> wrote:
Composed on a virtual keyboard, please forgive typos.
On Feb 26, 2017, at 21:16, Matt Palmer <mpalmer@hezmatt.org> wrote:
On Sun, Feb 26, 2017 at 05:41:47PM -0600, Brett Frankenberger wrote:
On Sun, Feb 26, 2017 at 12:18:48PM -0500, Patrick W. Gilmore wrote: I repeat something I've said a couple times in this thread: If I can somehow create two docs with the same hash, and somehow con someone into using one of them, chances are there are bigger problems than a SHA1 hash collision.
If you assume I could somehow get Verisign to use a cert I created to match another cert with the same hash, why in the hell would that matter? I HAVE THE ONE VERISIGN IS USING. Game over.
Valdis came up with a possible use of such documents. While I do not think there is zero utility in those instances, they are pretty small vectors compared to, say, having a root cert at a major CA.
I want a google.com cert. I ask a CA to sign my fake google.com certificate. They decline, because I can't prove I control google.com.
Even better: I want a CA cert. I convince a CA to issue me a regular, end-entity cert for `example.com` (which I control) in such a way that I can generate another cert with the same SHA1 hash, but which has `CA:TRUE` for the Basic Constraints extension.
Wham! I can now generate certs for *EVERYONE*. At least until someone notices and takes away my shiny new toy...
Since I have said this somewhere on the order of half a dozen times, I will assume I am missing something obvious and all of you are doing it right.
So let me ask you: The attack creates two docs. You do not know the hash before the attack starts. You cannot take an existing file with a known hash and create a second file which matches the known hash. You start with nothing, run the "attack", and get two NEW docs that have the same hash. A hash which is brand new.
Now, please explain how you take a cert with one hash and somehow use this attack, which creates two new docs with a new hash, to do, well, anything?
1. Create a certificate C[ert] for a single domain you control with hash h(c). 2. Create a second certificate A[ttack] marked as a certificate authority such that h(C) = h(A). 3. Have a certificate authority sign cert C 4. Present the signature for A along with A for whatever nefarious purpose you want. See a similar version of this attack here using MD5 chosen-prefix collision attack: https://www.win.tue.nl/hashclash/rogue-ca/ -- Eitan Adler