On Wed, Oct 15, 2014 at 11:15:44AM -0600, Kevin Fenzi wrote:
On Wed, 15 Oct 2014 17:47:37 +0200 Till Maas opensource@till.name wrote:
the current issue only allows an attack against the secrecy of SSL communication. This does not seem to be a problem for koji as used in Fedora, since it uses client certificates for authentication and therefore there should be no secret cookie that could be obtained. Also the attack requires the attacker to be able to make the victim send special SSL messages/HTTP requests, which is also not feasible if only the koji command line client is used, which is how most if not all people access koji when they are authenticated.
My thought was that someone could get another users cert. Which, if the user was an admin would allow them to do all sorts of bad things.
The cert itself isn't exposed via this?
Technically it would be the private key that needs to be protected, and since it is not transfered in TLS messages it stays protected against this attack.
Regards Till