• Wednesday, April 9, 2014

The Heartbleed Bug is a serious vulnerability in the popular OpenSSL cryptographic software library. This weakness allows stealing the information protected, under normal conditions, by the SSL/TLS encryption used to secure the Internet. SSL/TLS provides communication security and privacy over the Internet for applications such as web, email, instant messaging (IM) and some virtual private networks (VPNs).

The Heartbleed bug allows anyone on the Internet to read the memory of the systems protected by the vulnerable versions of the OpenSSL software. This compromises the secret keys used to identify the service providers and to encrypt the traffic, the names and passwords of the users and the actual content. This allows attackers to eavesdrop on communications, steal data directly from the services and users and to impersonate services and users.

What leaks in practice?

We have tested some of our own services from attacker's perspective. We attacked ourselves from outside, without leaving a trace. Without using any privileged information or credentials we were able steal from ourselves the secret keys used for our X.509 certificates, user names and passwords, instant messages, emails and business critical documents and communication.

How to stop the leak?

As long as the vulnerable version of OpenSSL is in use it can be abused. Fixed OpenSSL has been released and now it has to be deployed. Operating system vendors and distribution, appliance vendors, independent software vendors have to adopt the fix and notify their users. Service providers and users have to install the fix as it becomes available for the operating systems, networked appliances and software they use.

As of 4/9/2014 all Zap5 Networks web servers (including client shared web servers) have been patched against this vulnerability. You can check and test your website using this tool: http://filippo.io/Heartbleed/


References

CVE-2014-0160
NCSC-FI case# 788210
http://www.openssl.org/news/secadv_20140407.txt (published 7th of April 2014, ~17:30 UTC)
http://blog.cloudflare.com/staying-ahead-of-openssl-vulnerabilities (published 7th of April 2014, ~18:00 UTC)
http://heartbleed.com (published 7th of April 2014, ~19:00 UTC)
http://www.ubuntu.com/usn/usn-2165-1/
http://www.freshports.org/security/openssl/
https://blog.torproject.org/blog/openssl-bug-cve-2014-0160
https://rhn.redhat.com/errata/RHSA-2014-0376.html
http://lists.centos.org/pipermail/centos-announce/2014-April/020249.html
https://lists.fedoraproject.org/pipermail/announce/2014-April/003205.html
http://www.kb.cert.org/vuls/id/720951
https://www.cert.fi/en/reports/2014/vulnerability788210.html
https://www.cert.at/warnings/all/20140408.html
http://www.circl.lu/pub/tr-21/