Virtual Security Research, LLC. http://www.vsecurity.com/ Security Advisory -=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=- Advisory Name: Chrome Password Manager Cross Origin Weakness Release Date: 2010-02-15 Application: Google Chrome Web Browser Versions: 4.0.249.78, 3.0.195.38, and likely earlier Severity: Medium/Low Author: Timothy D. MorganVendor Status: Update Released [2] CVE Candidate: CVE-2010-0556 Reference: http://www.vsecurity.com/resources/advisory/20100215-1/ -=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=- Product Description ------------------- "Google Chrome is a web browser that runs web pages and applications with lightning speed." [1] Vulnerability Overview ---------------------- In mid-January, VSR identified a vulnerability in Google Chrome which could be used in phishing attacks in specific types of web sites. This issue may make it much easier to convince a victim to submit web application credentials to the attacker's site. Vulnerability Details --------------------- As with many modern browsers, Google Chrome implements a password manager to help users keep track of credentials used on various web sites. It may be used to store either HTTP authentication credentials or form-based credentials. The vulnerability surfaces in a situation where a user visits a web page which includes an embedded object, such as an image, from a third-party site. If an attacker had control of the third-party web server, he could request credentials from the user via HTTP authentication. This style of attack has been documented in the past, and some of variations on this theme are explored in a recent paper by VSR [5]. However, in the case of vulnerable versions of Google Chrome, the password manager may pre-fill the authentication dialog box with credentials intended for parent page's domain, leaving users one click away from account compromise. This issue would affect Chrome users which use applications that allow users to embed objects from third parties. Examples of such applications may include message boards, blogs, or social networking sites. The following steps may be used to reproduce the issue: 1. Set up an HTML page with the following contents: This page should not be protected by any authentication and should be hosted at: http://victim.example.org/test-img.html 2. Set up an HTTP digest protected area under the following URL: http://victim.example.org/private/ 3. Set up the attacker's server to be protected by HTTP authentication such that the following URL is protected: http://evil.example.com/image.png 4. Use Google Chrome to log in to an area protected with HTTP authentication, such as: http://victim.example.org/private Save the password in the password manager. 5. Finally, access the unauthenticated HTML page on the victim's server: http://victim.example.org/test-img.html Since the embedded image requires authentication, a password prompt should appear. In vulnerable versions of Google Chrome, this form will be pre-filled with the stored credentials from the victim.example.org domain, even though the password prompt is generated by evil.example.com. Versions Affected ----------------- The issue was originally discovered in version 3.0.195.38 and was also verified to exist in version 4.0.249.78. Testing was conducted on the Windows platform. Vendor Response --------------- The following timeline details Google's response to the reported issue: 2010-01-20 VSR submitted a security bug report [3]. Chromium development team began researching the issue. 2010-01-21 VSR provided additional details on the test scenario. Chromium developers successfully reproduced the issue and committed a fix to the source repository [4]. 2010-02-10 Chrome stable version 4.0.249.89 released which includes the fix. 2010-02-15 VSR advisory released. Recommendation -------------- Upgrade to the latest version of Google Chrome as soon as possible. Users are advised to be wary of HTTP authentication prompts and to carefully inspect the domains presented in these messages to see if they match the domain of the expected site. Common Vulnerabilities and Exposures (CVE) Information ------------------------------------------------------ The Common Vulnerabilities and Exposures (CVE) project has assigned the number CVE-2010-0556 to this issue. This is a candidates for inclusion in the CVE list (http://cve.mitre.org), which standardizes names for security problems. Acknowledgements ---------------- Thanks to the Chromium development team for the prompt response. -=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=- References: 1. http://www.google.com/chrome/intl/en/features.html 2. http://googlechromereleases.blogspot.com/2010/02/stable-channel-update.html 3. http://code.google.com/p/chromium/issues/detail?id=32718 4. http://src.chromium.org/viewvc/chrome?view=rev revision=36829 5. http://www.vsecurity.com/download/papers/WeaningTheWebOffOfSessionCookies.pdf -=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=- Copyright 2010 Virtual Security Research, LLC. All rights reserved.
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Editor’s note: This work was originally published by VSR on their website at https://www.vsecurity.com/resources/advisories.html. VSR is now a part of NCC Group, so we have migrated this content to research.nccgroup.com. The advisory text as above has been copy-pasted to this blog for historical reference.