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Hidetake Jo A security policy for the web Access from http://www.example.com/dir/test.html Meant to prevent cross-site issues Evil.com can’t access content from bank.com Simple enough, right? SOP is implemented everywhere Browser features, RIA plugins, etc. SOP is implemented differently Neat but dangerous Makes web developers life very interesting High level overview of.. Same Origin Policies by technology ▪ Browsers, Javascript, Cookies, RIA, etc Summary of deltas How this affects us Conclusion Get/Post request can be made from one domain to another. Example.com Request * Get/Post response can only be read under the following conditions: If the ports match on both sites. If the domain + subdomain match on both sites. Example.com Response Example.com Example.com:80 Response Example.com:80 Example.com:80 Response Example.com:100 Example.com Response Foo.Example.com Example.com Response Different.com Exceptions If two different subdomains (different origin) is under the same domain.. And one is performing domain lowering. ▪ Clock.live.com vs Vulnerable.live.com ▪ Clock.live.com setting document.domain to live.com. ▪ Vulnerable.live.com is owned then attacker can set domain to live.com and access clock.live.com! ▪ Threats: All eggs in one basket (*.google.com or *.live.com). Crosssubdomain communication. Domain Lowering Putting all the eggs in one basket Cross-Site Request Forgery Netflix ▪ http://www.webappsec.org/lists/websecurity/archive/20 06-10/msg00063.html Get/Post request for adding movie to queue Get/Post works cross-domain… If you’re including or exposing resource cross-domain such as JSON, SCRIPT, etc Script ▪ Forfeit trust to site exposing the script resource XML/JSON ▪ Risk information disclosure if you’re exposing resource ▪ E.g. Read content of script, access JSON array, retrieve XML data. ▪ JSON: var data = { "social": "11-22-3333", "name": "Joe"}; ▪ XML: var data = <info><social>11-22-3333</social><name>Joe</name> Example.com Response Example.com Example.com:80 Response Example.com:80 Example.com:80 Response Example.com:100 Example.com Response Foo.Example.com Example.com Response Different.com Javascript\XML Hijacking Gmail ▪ http://jeremiahgrossman.blogspot.com/2006/01/advanc ed-web-attack-techniques-using.html Exposed script contained contacts info Script path was fully predictable Script can be included x-domain Script content can be accessed Variables Functions (e.g. function_name.toString() ) Cookies by default permit read/write access to cookie values if: The domain is the same (Limited subdomain check) ▪ Foo.bar.com bar.com ▪ bar.com foo.bar.com Does not respect port numbers! Does not respect scheme ▪ Unless you opt in to secure attribute Example.com Response Example.com Example.com:80 Response Example.com:80 Example.com:80 Response Example.com:100 Example.com Response Foo.Example.com Example.com Response Different.com Foo.bar.com can steal/poison cookie on bar.com. Foo.bar.com:1111 can steal/poison cookie on Foo.bar.com:2222. With regards to cookie and subdomains and ports are of limited security boundary. IE does not use ports during origin calculation. You can read/write/script between: ▪ Bar.com:80 and Bar.com:1234 Example.com Response Example.com Example.com:80 Response Example.com:80 Example.com:80 Response Example.com:100 Example.com Response Foo.Example.com Example.com Response Different.com Hosting multiple web apps on different ports Should be avoided when possible Ports are not a security boundary for IE Host web apps on separate domains You can not issue request cross-domain. You can only read response on the same domain. Most restrictive Same Origin Policy But it allows you to insert arbitrary header value when issuing request. (e.g. SOAPAction header) Example.com Request Example.com Using declarative security Permits you to expand origin ▪ This is an opt-in policy/feature ▪ Access-Control-Allow-Origin/Method Header Allows you to send request cross-domain Allows you to read response cross-domain More Info: Cross Origin Resource Sharing (Firefox 3.5, Safari 4.0) ▪ http://www.w3.org/TR/access-control/ XDomainRequest Object (IE8) ▪ http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/cc288060(VS.85).aspx Overly permissible policy Kind of like ACL on Windows. Tempting for frustrated developer to give everyone full control. Site where the binary lives is origin. Site where the binary is embedded is also considered origin in some cases. App.xap lives in foo.com and a page on bar.com is using it. App now has access to bar.com and foo.com. ▪ Read/Write DOM on bar.com ▪ Make network requests back to foo.com Lock these RIA runtimes down: Cross-domain policy files ▪ For Flash and Silverlight ▪ Easy to mess up: Tom found a major site that allowed all sites on the internet to read/write to their site for over a year.. Embed these applets with security flags. ▪ Silverlight: ▪ EnableHtmlAccess ▪ Flash ▪ AllowScriptAccess Hosting potentially evil RIA files Can make network connection back to your host Embedding potentially evil RIA files Can script on your site Hosting overly permissive policy files Can read and write against your domain Flash flash.net.SharedObject ▪ Capacity: 100KB by default (adjustable) ▪ Same Origin Policy ▪ By Domain ▪ By User 3rd Party Content (enabled by default) Silverlight System.IO.IsolatedStorage.IsolatedStorageFile ▪ Capacity: 1024KB ▪ Same Origin Policy ▪ By User + Assembly ▪ By User + Domain + Assembly HTML 5 Feature Enables cross-domain Communication target.postMessage(msg, origin) Can implemenet listener by calling target.attachEvent(“onmessage” , handler) target.addEventListener(“message”, handler, useCapture) Origin check in handler optional Lack of optional origin check Trusting potentially malicious origin If no origin check is done by design Sanitize incoming message before use In addition to Get/Post there is Put/Delete support for forms in HTML 5 Html 5 Spec supports this via form Hopefully this will not be allowed x-domain! Html 5 Feature Enables bi-directional binary/text comm. Still unclear how it will be secured Enable cross-domain communication. Up to dev/test/pm to define the policy. Red flag! Sitelock technique Contain usage to one domain. (Different from SOP) Generally should follow the same-origin policy… But which one??? ▪ The strictest definition to be safest. ▪ Port, Domain, Subdomain, Protocol should match for read/write access. My attempt at a summary table… Cross-domain Get/Post can introduce CSRF. Incorrectly configured RIA policy files and apps can introduce cross-site access. Lenient subdomain rule for cookie access makes hosting multiple sites a challenge. Cross-domain resource sharing of script, json, xml, etc can introduce hijacking problems. IE doesn’t utilize port for origin calculation. Web apps should be hosted on distinct domains. One-off x-domain apis such as postmessage can catch developers off guard. Etc.. We’re in a bad state with varying definition for same-origin policy. Hard for developers to understand the risk with their design. Audit all the areas that can go wrong: Webservices that return includable data. New ActiveX controls. Features that leverage RIA platforms. Crossdomain policy files Declarative security flags Usage of apis that permit x-domain access by design Web service that permits state changing operations Topology of the web app setup. Etc. There are other other technology that needs to be looked at: Gears, Air, Java, HTML 5 features, etc. Same-origin policy is inconsistent today. It will probably continue to stay this way. For compat reasons… The same-origin policy will probably evolve. Hence the definition in this deck may be obsolete soon. If you have questions, concerns, corrections please mail me at: [email protected]