Security And Privacy Of Social Logins (III): Privacy In Single Sign-On Protocols

 This post is the second out of three blog posts summarizing my (Louis Jannett) research on the design, security, and privacy of real-world Single Sign-On (SSO) implementations. It is based on my master's thesis that I wrote between April and October 2020 at the Chair for Network and Data Security.

We structured this blog post series into three parts according to the research questions of my master's thesis: Single Sign-On Protocols in the Wild, PostMessage Security in Single Sign-On, and Privacy in Single Sign-On Protocols.

Overview

Part I: Single Sign-On Protocols in the Wild

Although previous work uncovered various security flaws in SSO, it did not work out uniform protocol descriptions of real-world SSO implementations. We summarize our in-depth analyses of Apple, Google, and Facebook SSO. We also refer to the sections of the thesis that provide more detailed insights into the protocol flows and messages.
It turned out that the postMessage API is commonly used in real-world SSO implementations. We introduce the reasons for this and propose security best practices on how to implement postMessage in SSO. Further, we present vulnerabilities on top-visited websites that caused DOM-based XSS and account takeovers due to insecure use of postMessage in SSO.

Part III: Privacy in Single Sign-On Protocols

Identity Providers (IdPs) use "zero-click" authentication flows to automatically sign in the user on the Service Provider (SP) once it is logged in on the IdP and has consented. We show that these flows can harm user privacy and enable new targeted deanonymization attacks of the user's identity.

Introduction to XS-Leaks in Single Sign-On

Cross-site leak (XS-Leak) refers to a family of browser side-channel techniques that can be used to infer and gather information about users [...]. While the deanonymization capabilities of XS-Leak attacks are only just being realized, some researchers have said the technique will soon be in the OWASP Top 10. 

In SSO setups, redirects can leak private information about the user. Thus, we focused on XS-Leaks that detect cross-origin redirects, i.e., whether a cross-origin request returns an `HTTP/200` or `HTTP/302` response. In this post, we present an XS-Leak that is based on the Fetch API and detects cross-origin redirects with 100% accuracy. The following method expects a URL, sends a GET request, and finally returns `true` if the response is a redirect or `false` if the response is no redirect:
// let is_redirect = await xs_leak_redirect("<URL>");  async function xs_leak_redirect(url) { 	let res = await fetch(url, { 		mode: "cors", 		credentials: "include", 		redirect: "manual" 	}).then( (response) => { 		if (response.type == "opaqueredirect") { 			return true; 		} 	}).catch( (error) => { 		return false; 	}); 	return res; } 

More details are provided in Section 5.1.4.1 of the thesis.

XS-Leaks in Single Sign-On: Account Leakage Attack

With the account leakage attack, the attacker can determine whether the victim has an account on a targeted SP with a certain IdP. Specifically, the attacker checks whether the victim has granted consent to the targeted SP with the IdP. This attack is scalable: The attacker can test multiple (SP, IdP) pairs and check for which pair the victim has an account on the SP. The following prerequisites must hold:
  • The victim visits an attacker-controlled website.
  • The victim is signed-in on the IdP (i.e., in Google Chrome with its Google account).
  • The IdP supports the standardized `prompt=none` parameter.
The attack idea is simple: Let's assume the attacker wants to know whether the victim has an account on SP `sp.com` with the IdP `idp.com`. The attacker first tricks the victim into visiting its malicious website `attacker.com`. We further assume that the victim has an active session on the IdP. Then, the attacker constructs an Authentication Request URL, as shown in the figure below. Note that the SP `sp.com` has the `client_id=superSecretClient` on the IdP, the `redirect_uri` is set to `sp.com/redirect`, and the `prompt=none` parameter is set. 
From the attacker's website, a cross-origin `Fetch` request is sent to that URL as shown before. If the `prompt=none` flow is requested with established consent on the SP, the IdP returns the Authentication Response as an `HTTP/302` redirect to the `redirect_uri`. If the victim has not granted the SP's consent, the IdP returns the consent page with an `HTTP/200` response and asks the user to grant the consent. Thus, based on whether the victim has or has not an account on `sp.com`, the IdP returns an `HTTP/302` redirect or an `HTTP/200` response. Although the Same Origin Policy prevents us from viewing the response from `idp.com`, we can use the XS-Leak to detect whether a redirect was performed or not. If a redirect was performed, the victim has an account on `sp.com` with the IdP. If no redirect was performed, the victim has no account.

We tested this attack with the Apple, Google, and Facebook IdP. It only works for Google and Facebook since Apple requires user interaction in each flow. A working PoC is provided on https://xsleak.sso.louisjannett.de. If the "Start" button is clicked, the website checks if you have an account on adobe.com, ebay.com, imdb.com, medium.com, or vimeo.com using either the Google or Facebook IdP. Make sure that you are signed in at Google and Facebook before testing and enable third-party cookies.

To circumvent this attack, the IdP must return an error as `HTTP/302` redirect if the `prompt=none` flow is requested, but no consent is given. This mitigation is described in the OpenID Connect specification, but as shown, not adopted by real-world IdPs.

More details are provided in Section 5.1 of the thesis.

XS-Leaks in Single Sign-On: Identity Leakage Attack

The identity leakage attack extends the account leakage attack by the `login_hint` parameter. The attacker can determine whether the victim has a certain identity on a targeted IdP. The attacker can use this information to check if a certain person is visiting its website. Therefore, all prerequisites of the account leakage attack must hold and the IdP must support the standardized `login_hint` parameter.

Once a victim visits the malicious website, the attacker must initially guess an (SP, IdP) pair that the victim most likely gave consent to, i.e., that causes the IdP in the `prompt=none` flow to return a redirect to `sp.com/redirect`. The attacker can use the account leakage attack to determine such a pair by testing the most-popular SPs and IdPs. Then, a new Authentication Request is created, and the `login_hint` parameter is set to the email address of the victim, i.e., `alice@example.com`. The attacker sends the Fetch request and determines whether the IdP returns an `HTTP/302` redirect or an `HTTP/200` response. If a redirect was performed, the attacker knows that the Authentication Request was valid, and thus the victim is `alice@example.com`. If no redirect was performed, the victim is not `alice@example.com`. The success of this attack depends on whether the attacker can guess (or eventually knows) an (SP, IdP) pair that the targeted victim gave consent to.

We tested this attack with the Apple, Google, and Facebook IdP. It only works for Google since Apple does not support the `prompt=none` flow, and Facebook does not support the `login_hint` parameter. We discovered that the `login_hint` parameter must contain a valid email address registered at Google. Otherwise, this parameter is ignored.


To mitigate this leakage, the IdP must return an error as `HTTP/302` redirect if a `login_hint` parameter is queried that the user does not own. We did not find any information about the `login_hint` parameter in the OpenID Connect specification that proposes guidelines for this scenario.

More details are provided in Sections 5.1 of the thesis.

Automatic Sign-In and Session Management Practices in the Wild

Following the observations of the account leakage and identity leakage attacks, we analyzed "zero-click" SSO flows in terms of automatic sign-in features provided by the IdPs with their SDKs. We found that under certain assumptions, the SDKs can be configured to automatically sign in the user on the SP even though the user did not click on the sign-in button and may not notice the sign-in process.

Google and Facebook support automatic sign-in with their SSO SDKs: Google Sign-In, Google One Tap, and Facebook Login. They follow a similar approach: The user visits the SP website that integrates and initializes the SDK with automatic sign-in enabled. Suppose the user has an active session on the IdP, valid consent for the SP, and third-party cookies enabled. In that case, the SDK first retrieves a logout state from browser storage to determine whether the user signed out previously using the SDK's sign-out method. If the logout state is set to false or does not exist, the SDK returns the Authentication Response to the SP website, i.e., to a registered callback. If it is set to true, the SDK does not proceed with the automatic sign-in and instead requires the user to click on the sign-in button. Thus, the execution of the automatic sign-in flow depends on the stored logout state. If the browser storage is cleared (i.e., cookies are deleted or a private window is opened), the logout state does not exist, and thus the automatic sign-in is enabled.

Note that the logout state is only a feature provided by the SDKs to stop unwanted sign-in operations on the SP. They do not prevent the SP from secretly receiving tokens from the IdP. If the SP does not use the SDK's sign-out method, the logout state will never be set to true. Alternatively, the SP may manually request the tokens from the IdP in the background without paying attention to any logout state. Note that this automatic sign-in flow is different than the standardized `prompt=none` flow because it returns the tokens in the background (i.e., via Fetch requests), whereas the `prompt=none` flow requires a redirect that is in some form visible to the user.

Google and Facebook use different approaches to receive the Authentication Response in the background. Google sends a `getTokenResponse` RPC from the SP website to its proxy iframe and receives the tokens with postMessage. Facebook issues a simple CORS request and receives the tokens in the CORS response.

For instance, SPs can send the following CORS request with the Fetch API to Facebook:
GET /x/oauth/status?client_id=<CLIENT_ID> HTTP/1.1 Host: www.facebook.com Origin: https://sp.com Cookie: c_user=REDACTED; xs=REDACTED; 

If the user has an active session at Facebook (i.e., cookies are set) and valid consent, Facebook responds with a CORS response and explicitly allows the SP to read the `fb-ar` header that contains the tokens:
HTTP/1.1 200 OK Access-Control-Allow-Origin: https://sp.com Access-Control-Allow-Credentials: true Access-Control-Expose-Headers: fb-ar,fb-s fb-s: connected fb-ar: {"user_id": "REDACTED", "access_token": "REDACTED", "signed_request": "REDACTED"} 

We tested the automatic sign-in on top-visited SPs and found that some of them implement it as expected. For instance, `change.org` supports automatic sign-in with Facebook: First, we open `change.org` without being logged in on Facebook. Thus, we are not signed-in automatically. Then, we log in on Facebook and reload `change.org`. As shown, `change.org` uses the CORS request to receive the tokens from Facebook and finally logs us in. The user interface does not indicate that we were just signed in. Only the small profile picture in the top right corner is added to the UI.


More details and examples of automatic sign-in flows are provided in Section 5.3 of the thesis.

Acknowledgments

My thesis was supervised by Christian MainkaVladislav Mladenov, and Jörg Schwenk. Huge "thank you" for your continuous support, advice, and dozens of helpful tips. 
Also, special thanks to Lauritz for his feedback on this post and valuable discussions during the research. Check out his blog post series on Real-life OIDC Security as well.

Authors of this Post

Louis Jannett

Related word


  1. How To Hack
  2. Hacker Tools Mac
  3. Hacker Tools Hardware
  4. Hack Tools Online
  5. Underground Hacker Sites
  6. Hacker Tools Linux
  7. Hacker Tools For Pc
  8. Game Hacking
  9. Hacker Tools Apk
  10. Hacker Tools Software
  11. Pentest Automation Tools
  12. New Hack Tools
  13. Hack Tool Apk
  14. Black Hat Hacker Tools
  15. Hacking Apps
  16. Hacker Security Tools
  17. Nsa Hack Tools
  18. Hackrf Tools
  19. Best Hacking Tools 2019
  20. New Hacker Tools
  21. Hacker Hardware Tools
  22. Hack Tools For Ubuntu
  23. Hacking App
  24. Pentest Tools Find Subdomains
  25. Hacker
  26. Hacker Security Tools
  27. Hack Tools Online
  28. Hack Tools For Mac
  29. Hacker Tools For Pc
  30. Kik Hack Tools
  31. Best Hacking Tools 2020
  32. Beginner Hacker Tools
  33. Wifi Hacker Tools For Windows
  34. Hacker Security Tools
  35. Hacker Hardware Tools
  36. Hacker Tool Kit
  37. Pentest Automation Tools
  38. Hacking App
  39. Physical Pentest Tools
  40. New Hack Tools
  41. Beginner Hacker Tools
  42. Pentest Reporting Tools
  43. Nsa Hack Tools
  44. Hacking Tools For Games
  45. Hacker Tools Mac
  46. Best Hacking Tools 2019
  47. Hack Tool Apk No Root
  48. Hacking Apps
  49. Hacking Tools Kit
  50. Hackrf Tools
  51. Hacker Hardware Tools
  52. Hacker Tools Free Download
  53. Pentest Tools List
  54. Tools For Hacker
  55. Hacking Tools Name
  56. Tools 4 Hack
  57. Pentest Tools
  58. Hacking Tools And Software
  59. Hacking Tools For Pc
  60. World No 1 Hacker Software
  61. Pentest Tools Open Source
  62. Hack Tools For Pc
  63. Hak5 Tools
  64. Hacking Tools Name
  65. Wifi Hacker Tools For Windows
  66. Nsa Hacker Tools
  67. Hacker Techniques Tools And Incident Handling
  68. Pentest Tools Bluekeep
  69. Hack Tools Mac
  70. Hack App
  71. Hacking Tools For Games
  72. Hacking Tools For Windows 7
  73. Hacking Tools Free Download
  74. Hacking Tools Mac
  75. Hacker Tools For Pc
  76. Hacker Hardware Tools
  77. Hack Apps
  78. Best Hacking Tools 2019
  79. Hack Tools 2019
  80. Pentest Tools Subdomain
  81. Hacker Tools Apk
  82. Hacks And Tools
  83. New Hack Tools
  84. Hacking Tools Mac
  85. Hacking Tools Windows 10
  86. Hacking Tools Mac
  87. Bluetooth Hacking Tools Kali
  88. Free Pentest Tools For Windows
  89. Pentest Tools Android
  90. Android Hack Tools Github
  91. Hacker Hardware Tools
  92. Hacker Tools Windows
  93. Hacker Tools Online
  94. What Is Hacking Tools
  95. Hacking Tools And Software
  96. Pentest Tools Subdomain
  97. Pentest Tools Free
  98. Pentest Tools Subdomain
  99. Hack Website Online Tool
  100. Pentest Tools List
  101. Pentest Tools Bluekeep
  102. Hackrf Tools
  103. Pentest Automation Tools
  104. Hacker Tools Software
  105. Hacking Tools For Windows
  106. Pentest Tools Linux
  107. Hacker Tools Hardware
  108. Hacker Techniques Tools And Incident Handling
  109. Install Pentest Tools Ubuntu
  110. Hacker Security Tools
  111. Hacking Apps
  112. Hacking Tools Hardware
  113. Install Pentest Tools Ubuntu
  114. Hacker Tools Apk Download
  115. Hacker Tools For Windows
  116. Hack Tool Apk No Root
  117. Github Hacking Tools
  118. Hacking Tools Free Download
  119. Hacking Tools Name
  120. Hak5 Tools
  121. Hacking Tools For Kali Linux
  122. Hacker Security Tools
  123. Pentest Tools Subdomain
  124. Hacking Apps
  125. Hack Tools For Pc
  126. Pentest Tools Linux
  127. Hacker Tools Apk
  128. Hack Apps
  129. Hacker Tools Hardware
  130. Hacking Tools Hardware
  131. Pentest Tools Download
  132. Install Pentest Tools Ubuntu
  133. Hacker Tools Github
  134. Pentest Tools Online
  135. Free Pentest Tools For Windows
  136. Best Hacking Tools 2020
  137. Hacker Hardware Tools
  138. Best Hacking Tools 2019
  139. Hacking Tools For Windows
  140. Game Hacking
  141. Beginner Hacker Tools
  142. Hacker Tools Apk
  143. Pentest Tools Tcp Port Scanner
  144. Pentest Tools For Mac
  145. Pentest Tools Find Subdomains
  146. Pentest Tools Free
  147. Nsa Hack Tools
  148. Hacking Tools Online
  149. Hack Tools
  150. Pentest Tools For Ubuntu
  151. Hack Tools For Ubuntu
  152. Blackhat Hacker Tools
  153. Pentest Tools Url Fuzzer
  154. Beginner Hacker Tools
  155. Hacking Tools Download
  156. Hack Apps
  157. Hacking Tools Free Download
  158. Best Hacking Tools 2020
  159. Pentest Tools Website Vulnerability
  160. Hacking Tools Mac
  161. Hack Tools For Ubuntu
  162. Wifi Hacker Tools For Windows
  163. Android Hack Tools Github
  164. Hacking Tools Software
  165. Hacking Tools For Pc
  166. Hacking Tools Software

0 comments:

Post a Comment