On 12/15/2011 09:32 AM, Mark Mcgloin wrote:
Hi Michael

We reviewed the threat model document in light of the concerns you raised
(originally in a thread called "Problem Statement") and decided that we
already provided enough information on threats and countermeasures from
malicious applications.

In addition, the consensus from the Oauth WG on that email thread ("Problem
Statement") was that the issue of users installing malware or any malicious
client is not an oauth specific problem and is not something we need to
educate users on, over and above what is stated already in section 4.1.4 of
the threat model. Based on that consensus, I would consider this issue
closed and we will not be making any changes to the threat model


Excuse me, but I was told that my comments would be better
addressed in the threats document, and now you tell me that
you can't be bothered to address them in the threats document
either. I find this completely dismissive of the real life problems
that this protocol will face.

This *is* an OAUTH specific problem because OAUTH is being
deployed massively into the threat environment it claims to
protect against. It doesn't protect them, and as far as I can
see there is nothing but hand waving dismissal rather than
advice about how to deal with the problem. The bad guys
don't care about your head-in-sand dismissal, and the
reemergence native apps are a fact of life now.

Mike



Regards
Mark McGloin

On Wed, 26 Oct 2011 13:17:58 , "Michael Thomas"<mike at mtcc.com>  wrote:

First, I think that this threat should be elevated to something more than
a threat because it is a fundamental assumption of the protocol that the
browser is trustworthy. I have heard far too many people on this list say
that that's silly because it is "obvious" but it is not obvious to the
uninitiated, who are the remaining 7*10^9-100 people in this world.

Second, I think it's worth explicitly pointing out that this PERTAINS TO
APPS
too. The world has changed significantly since OAUTH was conceived, and
native phone, etc apps continue to grow explosively after a long, long
decline leading up to OAUTH's birth. I would venture to say that a sizable
if not majority of uses of OAUTH will be in app settings.

A few inline comments:

4.1.4.  Threat: End-user credentials phished using compromised or
         embedded browser

    A malicious application could attempt to phish end-user passwords by
    misusing an embedded browser in the end-user authorization process,
    or by presenting its own user-interface instead of allowing trusted
    system browser to render the authorization user interface.  By doing
    so, the usual visual trust mechanisms may be bypassed (e.g.  TLS
    confirmation, web site mechanisms).  By using an embedded or internal
    client application user interface, the client application has access
    to additional information it should not have access to (e.g. uid/
    password).


[mat] I think it's also worth mentioning either here, or in another
threat that there is a further social engineering misuse/attack where an
app offers/demands to keep your credentials so that you don't have to go
through the authorization rigmarole. Users are already conditioned to
give their credentials up to do things -- just this morning I noticed
facebook
asking for my email password which they promise with sugar on top to not
store. It might be worth mentioning that things like CAPTCHA could be
deployed to defend against that sort of attack/misuse.

    Impact: If the client application or the communication is
    compromised, the user would not be aware and all information in the
    authorization exchange could be captured such as username and
    password.

    Countermeasures:

    o  Client developers and end-user can be educated to trust an
       external System-Browser only.


[mat] I assume that this is in here just for the amusement factor because
it is not a credible countermeasure.

    o  Client applications could be validated prior publication in a
       application market.

[mat] How would this be done in practice?

    o  Client developers should not collect authentication information
       directly from users and should instead use redirects to and back
       from a trusted external system-browser.


[mat] How would the resource/authentication server enforce such a thing?

The main problem here is that the countermeasures -- if they are practical
at all --
are deep and complex problems unto themselves. To just handwave them away
does
no justice to the seriousness of the threat. I realize that this strays
more
into BCP land but there isn't any B-C-P, and I'm not terribly convinced
there ever will be. In that respect, I think this threat and its potential
countermeasures need to be discussed in much more detail. If there is
anything
about OAUTH that will cause it to be junked, it's this threat.

Mike

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Mark McGloin
e-mail: mark.mcgl...@ie.ibm.com
Tel: +353 1 8155263
Mobile: +353 87 9932662
Security Architect, LotusLive and Cloud Business Support Systems
IBM Software Group
Building 6, IBM Technology campus, Damastown Industrial Estate, Mulhuddart,
Dublin 15

IBM International Holdings BV registered in Ireland with number 903924.
Registered office: Oldbrook House, 24-32 Pembroke Road, Ballsbridge, Dublin
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