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Security pro says new SSL attack can hit many sites

Security pro says new SSL attack can hit many sites

By:  Robert McMillan  On: 20 Nov 2009 For: IDG News Service (San Francisco Bureau) Creator

Leviathan Security Group has developed generic attack code using the Authentication Gap bug, but launching an attack is very difficult and first requires a man-in-the-middle attack

Leviathan Security Group has created a tool that webmasters can use to see if their sites are vulnerable to a SSL Authentication Gap attack.

Because SSL, and its replacement standard, TLS, are used in a wide range of Internet technologies the bug has far-reaching implications.

Thierry Zoller, a security consultant with London-based G-Sec Ltd., says that theoretically, the flaw could be used to attack mail servers. "An attacker can potentially highjack mails send over secured SMTP [Simple Mail Transfer Protocol] connections, even if they are authenticated by a private certificate," he said in an instant message interview.

Zoller, who has not seen Leviathan's code, said that if the attack works as advertized, it will be just a matter of days before someone else figures out how to do it.










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robert mcmillan Robert McMillan is a contributor to the International Data Group (IDG) News Service, which publishes global technology stories from bureaus around the world to more than 300 publications in more than 60 countries.

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