The "security blanket" factor
by
__aavhli5779
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· Score: 5, Insightful
I had this idea myself, and abandoned it because I realized just how much of a sense of security people get from having that little "lock" in the corner*. Though there are plenty of advantages to a strictly client-side security model, I still wonder how the unwashed ignorati surfing ecommerce sites who have had "MAKE SURE YOU HAVE ENTERED AN ENCRYPTED PAGE" drilled into them will take to this sort of idea.
Then again, if some sort of certification authority could be set up for Javascrypt-ed pages where the user was somehow assured that their data was equally protected as would be over https, then things would be more preferable. However, the byzantine red-tape behind getting a cert is possibly one of the things this technology would do away with best, and it would be a pity to remove such an obvious advantage.
In any case, it's promising, and I hope it is successful.
Well, you could just start up a cert org for producing Javascrypted certificates. Being a certification organization is primarily a trust issue. Open up your certification procedures, i.e. do you check an applicant's credit card, do you retain copies of drivers license, etc, or do you only require an email address, etc. Get yourself backed by an org like Truste, who will vouch for your integrity, etc. Then lobby for Microsoft, Netscape, and Mozilla to accept certs issued by you as valid, and you're ready to go. The technical issues behind creating a certificate are easy. If you want to read more into this, I suggest Googling for the Java 2 certification production scheme, etc. You can probably write up a quick scheme to create certs, sign them with your key, etc. After all, what is a cert? It's simply a document saying "Yup, site ______ can be trusted", signed with your private key. Then any MS, Netscape, or Mozilla client can simply validate the certificate using a widely available public key.
I've often wondered a little about the demand for ultra high powerd crypto for e-commerce. It's all good in theory, but when people happily send their credit card number to any random website claiming to seel stuff that does an SSL connection, just what is the point?
I seem to recall a quote about armoured cars being used to deliver a package from someone living under a bridge to someone living in a cardboard box.
And can someone explain to me again why some people still persist with giving their credit card numbers over the phone "because its more secure"?
Until the ideas actually sink in at a deep cultural level, we will continue to have all manner of stupid and contradictory actions from people who don't have the time to understand how all of this works. Hopefully it'll happen soon, right?
I think that is the entire point. Some businesses only put just enough effort into anything to make sure they won't get sued.
Vendors of e-commerce packages come to mind. Their software makes just enough effort so that if anything goes wrong it's going to happen on the end-systems and is therefore be the fault of operator / client / user.
The algorithm Javascrypt implements is absolutely useless for what you're talking about. AES is a symmetric encryption algorithm, which means that if you're going to send the data to some server using Javascrypt, at some point you need to communicate the key. If you send the key with the data (not to mention the.js for decryption), you've just royally wasted your time. This could only be useful if you agree to a key in advance using some non-internet connection method, in which case you're not going to go with a "cheap ass" encyption technique like this.
(I do not mean to disparage the Javascrypt work, it's good stuff. But it's more useful to introduce people to encryption then for any practical use.)
The genius of asymmetric encryption is that you can negotiate a secure connection without compromising it; it is not immediately obvious this should be possible and I consider it one of the larger mathematical results of the previous century. Extensions of that work have resulted in the ability to "sign" the keys during exchange. None of this applies to symmetric encryption because you have to agree on a key directly with the sender. (You could in theory still provide a third-party affirmation of the validity of a given key with symmetric encryption but not without giving the third party the key, which is undesirable. With asymmetric encryption the third party can sign a public key without knowing the private key that generated it, so even though Verisign signs your key it does not mean that Verisign can read through the resulting encrypted connection.)
A lot of people seem to be laboring under this misconception. Javascrypt is a neat toy and a valuable educational tool. It is not and can not replace SSL or the SSL layer of the browser. If someone wants to implement a version of SSL it may be sort of possible, but since you don't get raw socket support it's going to be a non-compatible kludge, barring some extremely clever and probably not at all cross-platform hack.
It's all good in theory, but when people happily send their credit card number to any random website claiming to seel stuff that does an SSL connection, just what is the point?
The point is that if you connect with SSL - then the website is not "random". I.e. you can verify that whoever pretends to be amazon.com - is really amazon.com. So you know who you are dealing with - you are not giving your credit card to somebody just pretending to be amazon.com.
Also you made sure that nobody could sniff the credit card number while it was traveling from you to amazon.com.
when people happily send their credit card number to any random website claiming to seel stuff that does an SSL connection, just what is the point?
What's the point? It is useful to encrypt the data in transit, even if you don't know who it's going to -- then at least there's only one party who can steal your card number, instead of a dozen. Beyond that, if you connect via SSL, and your browser doesn't complain about an invalid certificate, you know a couple of things:
The site has a certificate from a "trusted" certificate authority. While the level of verification that these CA's do isn't all that high, and they're not necessarily people you would trust a huge amount, you probably can trust that they've done some basic checking up on the site. The main thing is that they know who the legal entity is who paid for the certificate, which means that in the case of fraud, you have a better chance of being able to track the site owner down.
The web site your browser thinks its connected to is the same one listed in the certificate. This means that if you think you're connected to a site you consider trustworthy (for whatever reason), chances are very high that you actually are connected to that site and are not being spoofed by someone who's hijacked your connection.
So, there *is* value in that little lock on your browser window, even if the security isn't iron-clad. Note that the recent spate of Paypal hoax sites that ask for CC# and PIN do NOT use SSL. Why not? Because it's too hard, and too risky, for them to try to obtain a valid cert.
And can someone explain to me again why some people still persist with giving their credit card numbers over the phone "because its more secure"?;
Because it is! Under most circumstances anyway. Assuming you called them, and you looked up their phone number in some trustworthy place (like the phone book), then the odds that you're giving your credit card number to someone else are pretty small. Basically, the only way your number could be stolen would be if someone were tapping your line*. Not that wiretaps are all that tough to implement, but they're not that common, either, and more importantly they're not very easy to automate.
Compare that to sending your CC# to a web site. How could that be hijacked? Well, to start with, your machine could be trojaned (worms can quicky infect millions of machines), so the simple act of typing your number in compromises it. Next, assuming no SSL, the data will go in the clear over better than a dozen network hops, more often two dozen, before arriving at the destination. The number can be copied anywhere en-route. Thanks to DNS spoofing, router hacks, compromised proxies, etc., that destination may not even be where you think it is.
And computer-based CC# theft is eminently automatable. Packet sniffers can collect and report anything that appears to look like a number. Trojans can quietly search your whole machine looking for numbers. Faked sites can be set up to collect bunches of numbers.
The fact that computer-based CC# theft can be automated means that the rewards are higher, i.e. it's worth the effort. It's also less risky: the scanning tools can send the data to electronic dead drops on hacked machines so that with a little care the attacker is almost completely untraceable (until he tries to *use* the numbers, but that's a separate issue). Contrast that with the effort and risk involved in tapping telephones.
Until the ideas actually sink in at a deep cultural level, we will continue to have all manner of stupid and contradictory actions from people who don't have the time to understand how all of this works.
But don't denigrate useful security measures just because *you* don't understand how they work!
* Note that there is another obvious attack against phone-based CC# delivery: call re-routing. Someone with the ability to re-program the exchanges could get your call sent elsewhere. Again, though, this is labor-intensive and risky, and it requires a high level of access into telco systems, which is not easy to obtain (unlike 20 years ago).
-- Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
Re:The "security blanket" factor
by
damiam
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· Score: 1
And can someone explain to me again why some people still persist with giving their credit card numbers over the phone "because its more secure"?
Mostly because they're clueless. However, an unencrypted HTTP connection is probably less secure than a phone conversation, because it's much easier to sniff.
-- It's hard to be religious when certain people are never incinerated by bolts of lightning.
Or you could tell your poker buddies the key in person and then send the stuff to them once you get home and have complete security with your friends, even if you know that they would never understand "real" encryption.
That gives you security real cheap. I know something like GPG is free and assymetrical and all that, but it's not necessarily cheap in that you have to set it up at every point and educate all the users. This scheme doesn't even make you send an encrypted key to the person beforehand, which eliminates an extra step that Joe and Bob might not care about while they swap stories about cheating on their wives.
No highly secretive government assassin and spy program (or the equivalent) would use something like this for sure, but they're not the audience. This is more of a toy than anything, useful for personal stuff instead of sensitive stuff.
--
I design user interfaces for a free network management application,
Re:The "security blanket" factor
by
RzUpAnmsCwrds
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· Score: 1
"Because it is! Under most circumstances anyway. Assuming you called them, and you looked up their phone number in some trustworthy place (like the phone book), then the odds that you're giving your credit card number to someone else are pretty small. Basically, the only way your number could be stolen would be if someone were tapping your line*. Not that wiretaps are all that tough to implement, but they're not that common, either, and more importantly they're not very easy to automate."
You missed a very important point. When you called that person on the phone, you gave your credit card number to *a person* - someone who could write it down on a sheet of paper without anyone else in the office noticing.
With any good online retailer (e.g. Newegg), the card is billed and the information deleted almost instantly. Yes, the admin could install a program that records credit card numbers, but it would likely be noticed eventually.
"so the simple act of typing your number in compromises it."
Or your house could be bugged with a $5 walkie talkie, so the simple act of saying your number compromises it.
"And computer-based CC# theft is eminently automatable."
And phone based theft requires nothing but an angry employee with some paper, a tape recorder, or any other number of devices.
"the scanning tools can send the data to electronic dead drops on hacked machines so that with a little care the attacker is almost completely untraceable"
And if our employee isn't stupid enough to actually enter your transaction in the computer, they are completely untracable.
There are risks both ways. Neither method is particularly secure. Handing your credit card to that waitor isn't very secure either - but we do it all the time. What amazes me is the number of people who order things using their credit card *in public*. People just blurt it out.
The grandparent was right. Most people do far riskier things with their credit cards than online shopping. Perhaps ordering over the phone is less risky. But shopping online is far safer than handing your card to someone you don't even know - at the food store, the gas station, or wherever. How do you know that that cardreader they are swiping it trough is the real one. How do you know that they aren't committing it to memory. How do you know that the person behind the desk at the airport isn't really typing your cardnumber into notepad. Shopping online pales compared to these risks.
Re:The "security blanket" factor
by
swillden
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· Score: 1
Most theft of CC numbers from on-line stores is done by hacking the database where they're stored. Some on-line retailers delete this information, most keep it around as a "convenience" for the customer, some just keep it around for no good reason.
This means that the employee compromise opportunity is even greater with on-line retailers because it lasts longer.
Actually, though, from a cardholder's point of view, all of this is irrelevant. At least in the US, law limits cardholder liability to $50, and in practice the credit card business is so competitive that it's rare that card issuers will make the customer pay even that. They don't want to risk pissing customers off.
-- Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
Re:The "security blanket" factor
by
Jerf
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· Score: 1
No highly secretive government assassin and spy program (or the equivalent) would use something like this for sure, but they're not the audience.
Actually they can, and have; if you've got good physical security it's more secure then key exchange protocols (one more step that can't be broken), and it's not as inconvenient as one-time-pads, which as Schneier points out, is generally useless as it requires a secure sending of enough bits to send the entire message; why not send the message that way in the first place? (The answer, of course, is you may want to send a message later, but that's a relatively rare case; it happens but it's definately an edge case and means that "one-time pad" is not the be-all, end-all of encryption despite being the strongest of the "provably secure" algorithms.)
This argument is what I obliquely referenced in my original post; if you've got a secure mechanism for key exchange, 99 out of 100 times you can just use that to pass your messages instead, so why bother with this encryption?
Re:The "security blanket" factor
by
42forty-two42
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· Score: 1
The algorithm Javascrypt implements is absolutely useless for what you're talking about. AES is a symmetric encryption algorithm, which means that if you're going to send the data to some server using Javascrypt, at some point you need to communicate the key. If you send the key with the data (not to mention the.js for decryption), you've just royally wasted your time. This could only be useful if you agree to a key in advance using some non-internet connection method, in which case you're not going to go with a "cheap ass" encyption technique like this.
Ever hear of Diffie-Hellman? Sure, there's a risk of a man-in-the-middle attack, but it's better than nothing, and will protect against passive sniffing attacks.
neat piece of work
by
Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 2
this means that i can encrypt my webmail and the recepient can view it tooo gr8!
Re:Nice, but dangerous.
by
tomstdenis
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· Score: 5, Insightful
This is totally stupid. First off the js runs *locally*. The real risk is making sure the js you download is legit.
There is no risk of data going outwards though unless the js has been modified.
-- Someday, I'll have a real sig.
Re:Nice, but dangerous.
by
TheSpoom
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· Score: 2, Insightful
Uh, it's Javascript. The entire point is that processing is done client-side. No information is submitted to the site. There's no HTTPS or SSL because nothing is transmitted.
-- It's better to vote for what you want and not get it than to vote for what you don't want and get it.
- E. Debs
I've always thought that a Java implementation of public key encryption would be useful.
For example, I'd like to be able to put up a page on my web site containing a Java applet with my embedded public key.
That way I could finally remove my grandmother's AOL account from the exception list, the last obstacle standing between me and my "all incoming mail must be either signed by somebody I trust or encrypted with my public key" procmail rule.
Requiring the sender to use their own CPU cycles to encrypt messages is a classic variation on the "micropayments" approach to reducing spam volumes...
Some of these are free, some are Free and some are neither. Personally, I've written banking software using the RSA libs (I tried to get use BouncyCastle but management didn't like the name!).
--
----
Den ene knappen er powerknapp, den andre er Bender voice knapp "Bite My Shiny Metal Ass"
Re:No GPG?
by
Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 1, Informative
Hushmail uses a Java applet to encrypt mail - maybe you could get your grandmother to use that. There are other Java crypto implementations, such as Cryptix. Packaging one as an applet shouldn't be too hard.
Requiring the sender to use their own CPU cycles to encrypt messages is a classic variation on the "micropayments" approach to reducing spam volumes...
Which all sounds quite nice until you realize that it's a price that drops by 50% every 18 months or so. If everybody on the face of the earth started doing the same thing tomorrow, it'd take at most a few months before the spammers got the presses warmed back up.
Sorry, but we aren't going to DDOS the spammers. We need a system for holding them accountable.
-- I have no problem with your religion until you decide it's reason to deprive others of the truth.
Requiring the sender to use their own CPU cycles to encrypt messages is a classic variation on the "micropayments" approach to reducing spam volumes...
Which all sounds quite nice until you realize that it's a price that drops by 50% every 18 months or so.
I can't be bothered to look up the source, but I read somewhere that someone is working on a memory-bound solution, rather than CPU-bound. Since memory access speeds do not accelerate at the same rate as processor clock speeds, this should work better as users upgrade their systems.
a better part is that they can't just use dictionary based attacks on a domain, to contact those who use this technique they must find the public key.
-- "We have got to make Stan understand the importance of voting, because he'll definitely vote for our guy." - South Park
Javascript insecurity
by
Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 3, Interesting
Since javascript has to be the second biggest backdoor into your computer since MS Windows, it never ceases to amaze me that people can take this stuff seriously.
Re:Javascript insecurity
by
Phroggy
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· Score: 2, Insightful
Are you talking about JavaScript itself, or a particular implementation of it?
-- $x='S24;r)>63/* h@<5+oZ)32"5cz';$me='phroggy'x$]; $x=~y+ -xz+\0-Tx+;print$_^chop$me for split'',$x;
Re:Javascript insecurity
by
frozenray
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· Score: 1
Since javascript has to be the second biggest backdoor into your computer since MS Windows, it never ceases to amaze me that people can take this stuff seriously.
In an effort to win the browser wars by adding functionality, Microsoft dug their own security grave by adding a File System Object to their scripting engines - without it, many browser-based exploits won't work.
Goes to show that your bad design decisions will always catch up with you and that adding security as an afterthought never works.
-- "There are already a million monkeys on a million typewriters, and Usenet is NOTHING like Shakespeare." - Blair Houghton
The problem is knowing when you're dealing with legitimate Javascrypt encryption, and when it may be some malicious code instead (see my post above regarding certification).
Also there's still no way of ensuring that your data, once received on the server-side, will be used properly. That will, as always, come down to an issue of trust between you and the vendor.
I've used javascript cryptography routines before, once in a php project for authentication, used javascript to generate an md5 hash of the password and sent the hash over http.
I considered it a hack, but it's what the client wanted, and who am I, the developer, to question the client's motives? Cheap bastard, didn't want to pay for an SSL cert. Just hope no one passes the hash.;)
I don't see why this is a problem for *hiding passwords*, but the hash can be intercepted and replay attacks can be done. What you should do would be to have the client request a single-use time-limited challenge nonce from the server and hash the password together with it, and compare with the original.
Re:useful
by
Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 1, Insightful
It's worse than a hack. It accomplishes nothing.
People use encryption when sending passwords, so others can't intercept the passwords and use them. Now you're sending hashes over the network. Others can just intercept the hashes and use them. The attackers won't know what the original passwords were, but what do they care? They can still log in to those accounts.
Yeah, I explained to the client the concept of "passing the hash" and if someone was sniffing the network traffic that a hashed password wouldn't matter and blah blah blah.
I remember his words were "well, it's secure enough for our purposes". So rather than argue, I simply went ahead and wrote it. C'est la vie.
While I agree with you that it's not the best security in the world it's not completely useless to send the password hash over the network.
In the overall scheme of things, the risk of someone intercepting traffic is minimal compared to the risk of someone grabbing the entire password database. The real point of using the password hash is to keep the cleartext password out of a database.
Let's face it. It's a lot less time consuming to just grab an entire database than it is to intercept all the traffic (even if it is automated) until you get the passwords you want.
Doesn't Yahoo! do that, they issue a particular key (as a hidden html form element) that gets hashed with the password, I imagine they store this key in the session variables in the server.
Ah, I remember the fun trying to use tcl to create a program that can download and convert emails from the Yahoo web mailbox, the project is still in my ever-full "Pending" list, unfortunately.
-- What time is it/will be over there? Check with my iPhone app!
take a hash of the password (Ph1) as the passtoken.
now, on the client, hash the password -> Ph1 do Md5sum(Ph1 XOR SessionID) and send this. Compare on server, where you have the same two pieces of information. Now a replay attack wont work as often (only with the right session id, which is a very slim chance.
The MD5 in the last step is not a hash of a hash, which would yield no improvement. By introducing the SessionID you introduce new info. With the hash, you distribute this info evenly, making reversing it very hard.
Of course, it is a hack, but not everybody can use https, for practical or political reasons. No need to use plaintexts passwords in any case.
But it sounds like the original poster was using some kind of scheme that wasn't universal anyway (not that I understood exactly what he was doing). If you're going to be setting up some other system manually, and it's a smaller scale operation (perhaps for B2B use), you could compare thumbprints on the SSL certs to make sure people are on the up and up. (Whereas comparing thumbrints wouldn't be very practical for Amazon.com.)
Javascript not just for Clients
by
yomahz
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· Score: 3, Interesting
There are a number of servers that support server-side javascript. I recently had a project where a remote office needed to communicate with a servlet based webpage using RC4 ecnrypted parameters.
The remote office didn't know much programing so I wrote a RC4 and base64 implementation in Javascript for them to implement server side.
-- "A mind is a terrible thing to taste."
Nice approach
by
randall_burns
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· Score: 3, Interesting
This stuff is nice because Javascript is a very accessible language(i.e. lots of people know it). This is stuff that can be maintained in situations where other approaches aren't really practical.
I'm also glad to see folks doing more with the capabilities within a browser. The folks that are taking this the furthest that I've seen are the folks at Technical Pursuit.
I've been poking around trying to generate Web-site passwords by hashing the hostname and a master password, and I've come up with this bookmarklet which takes the first 8 chars of the hex representation of the MD5 hash.
This means you only have to remember one master password, and each site you register for gets its own unique password - instead of using the same throwaway password all over so you've given your whole online identity to each site's admins...
I've been meaning to find a crypto guy to ask if I could just use CRC32 to hash the input string, since MD5 is too much Javascript to bookmark in IE. I know it's not a secure way to checksum a file, but given a CRC32 hash and part of the input, can you recover the other part? Anybody?
I've taken a look at your site, and I see a couple of possible problems with your scheme.
First off, the master password thing makes me nervous. If your master password is compromised, then all your previous passwords are compromised. I think that there are ways to mitigate this risk, by using salts. I'm not sure about this, but it's my gut feel.
Second, to your question. You probably do not want to use CRC32 to hash the input. When you take MD5(masterpw + siteurl) = sitepw, you're relying on the fact that if someone gets your sitepw, they still won't be able to recover the masterpw even if they know the url.
It's a little late, and despite my nick, I'm a bit rusty on the mathematical details at the moment. My inclination is that CRC32 isn't a good idea for absolute security. Reply if you want to chat about this off-thread, and I'll get in touch.
Re:Password generation Javascript bookmarklet
by
nicwolff
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· Score: 1
I agree about the master password being a point of vulnerability if it gets key-captured, or shoulder-surfed, and salts wouldn't help any in that case, but this isn't meant for your most vital passwords to servers or bank accounts, it's meant for all those damned e-commerce and community site registrations for which you end up making up and forgetting crap passwords or using the same one repeatedly...
A few years ago
Me: I know Java!
Silly person: Cool, you can make applets!
A few less years ago
Me: I know Java!
Silly person: Cool, you can do DHTML!
Now
Me: I know Java!
Silly person: So you can do encryption!
Think AC. Think. When do you call encryption in a website? Transactions. Passwords use hashing, not enc... so just financial stuff, really. I guess some places encrpyt user data, but I'd just as soon as obfuscate it with base64 and some slipping.
Not really needed if you're over SSL & HTTPS, just if you want to keep ISP eyes away from your stuff. A discussion site doesn't really need to worry about that.
so like: $this = md5($pass); mailpass($pass); userpass($this);// stuffs password in db
Then when the user signs in: if($dbpass != md5(getpass($post_pass))) die('wrong pass dude');
Not likely to even notice that one.
Am I the only one...
by
eviltypeguy
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· Score: 4, Funny
Am I the only one that read the headline as:
"Java's Crypt"
Java dead already? Odd...
I thought, geez the Slashdot Trolls really *have* taken over...
For quite a good long time now (in computer terms that is) Yahoo has been doing this same thing. If you log-in without entering SSL mode, you need to have javascript enabled in your browser so that the script can MD5-encrypt your password.
Despite the whole client-side-encryption advantage, I dislike how much easier it would be to perform a man-in-the-middle, or a number of other exploits. I will admit, however, that I am quite concerned with the prospect of honeypot SSL sites, designed to steal info, but I think the former is more likely. So, for now, I am sticking with SSL. Maybe in conjunction with SSL, this would make an ideal solution. Of course, SSH would be even better...
I'm already seeing people mix the two up in this thread, let's set this down straight:
JavaScript/ECMAScript: Untyped yucky scripting language developed by Netscape (IIRC) and built into browsers so you can have image rollovers.
-- has nothing whatsoever to do with --
Java: OO, multi-threaded, multi-platform language used occasionally on websites as applets, but much more frequently on the back end for app servers and the like.
This has been a public information posting.
--
----
Den ene knappen er powerknapp, den andre er Bender voice knapp "Bite My Shiny Metal Ass"
It's true that JavaScript and Java have little in common. The name was a marketing ploy. (It was originally called LiveScript.) But JavaScript does have types-- in fact, it's an oo language.
It's just weakly typed.
Re:Nice, but dangerous.
by
evilviper
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· Score: 4, Insightful
in this guy's site, because he can read it, and because it's not over a HTTPS or SSL connection, so can anyone else.
NO! The data never leaves your browser. Therefore, nobody on the net can see it under any circumstances. Also, unless there is a trojan piece of javascript code that submits it to his site (a potential problem with a program in any languge) he can't possibly see it either.
This isn't secure
by
ArkanWindsong
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· Score: 3, Insightful
The problem with hashing a password with js and then just sending the hash is that the hash effectively becomes the password. i.e. all someone needs to do is eavesdrop your http session and record the hash value. The attacker can then send that same hashed value to the server and login as you.
The server must hash the password itself or it isn't secure. Or the hash value must be protected as much as the password.
What, No RSA/ElGamal? :-)
by
Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 1
Kudos to the authors, but really, this is nothing new. Symmetric encryption in java script has been around for a long time. What the world needs(tm) is a good implementation of RSA/ElGamal asym crypto in javascript that doesn't make your computer seem like it took a hit of dank before running through primality tests and arbitrary size integer mods and pows. Because of the nature of that problem, I don't forsee this really coming to fruition, so if you need asym, you'll be resigned to client side Java or native client implemenations.
LazyWeb MacroMedia Wish: Another way to obtain pervasive crypto is to encourage MacroMedia to put BigInteger in their Flash faculties:)
Similar techniques are in use already
by
gusnz
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· Score: 5, Interesting
Have a look at Yahoo Mail's login page (you may have to log out of Yahoo services completely to see it). If you view source on that, you'll see:
/*
* A JavaScript implementation of the RSA Data Security, Inc. MD5 Message
* Digest Algorithm, as defined in RFC 1321.
* Copyright (C) Paul Johnston 1999 - 2000.
* Updated by Greg Holt 2000 - 2001.
* See http://pajhome.org.uk/site/legal.html for details.
*/
They're using a JS implementation of the MD5 algorithm to calculate client-side hashes of user passwords before form submittal.
It's definitely an interesting approach especially of a site that size, when you look at how much server CPU usage a full SSL login connection would take. And in the event that someone compromises a secure server, your password wouldn't be available to the attacker, only the hash.
Plus, JS is free to implement (unlike a SSL cert) so hopefully if this technique catches on, more mom-n-pop sites will wind up using it instead of a totally unencrypted login connection.
Re:Similar techniques are in use already
by
BlueFall
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· Score: 2, Interesting
That's cool to know, but I don't think that this is true:
And in the event that someone compromises a secure server, your password wouldn't be available to the attacker, only the hash.
If you look at the code on the site, they have a 'challenge' value that is appended to the hash of the password, so to calculate the challenge response you need both the 'challenge value' (a.k.a. a nonce) and your password. The server needs the same thing. I think that this same technique is used in APOP.
The only way that they wouldn't need some shared secret is if you used some sort of asymmetric signing protocol, but then key distribution is a problem...
Re:Similar techniques are in use already
by
gusnz
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· Score: 1
...to calculate the challenge response you need both the 'challenge value' (a.k.a. a nonce) and your password. The server needs the same thing.
I suppose it depends on how the backend works. I imagine Yahoo for instance have a heckload of servers; perhaps if they have dedicated authentication servers that do all the hashing and authentication, a compromised web server still wouldn't allow password retrieval if it was just a pass-through of the hash.
I know what you mean though, the password must be stored on a server somewhere in plaintext for MD5 authentication to work. Still, it's better than nothing.
The only way that they wouldn't need some shared secret is if you used some sort of asymmetric signing protocol, but then key distribution is a problem...
Yeah, that'd rock. I wonder if anyone's working on a JS implementation of Diffie-Hellman encryption... coupled with the XML2HTTP libraries available in IE5+ and Mozilla for data transfer (or a hidden Java applet/IFRAME), you could have some seriously interesting applications using that in lieu of (or in addition to) full SSL. Diffie-Hellman is an asymmetric cipher that can auto-generate keys without a pre-existing shared secret (if my vague recall of crypto theory is working, any crypto mavens out there feel free to post corrections:) so it should be quite applicable to server-client work over an untrusted network.
Re:Similar techniques are in use already
by
An+Anonymous+Hero
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· Score: 1
* Copyright (C) Paul Johnston 1999 - 2000.
Incidentally, this one is pretty widespread (!), available from here. Walker uses another one by Henri Torgemane (no home page that I could find).
Re:Similar techniques are in use already
by
metalpet
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· Score: 2, Informative
Yeah, home pages are good. Someday I'll write one.
In the meanwhile, my original page has been mirrored at this page by a kind soul.
The pajhome source code is arguably prettier than mine, and should almost always be used, rather than mine.
To my defense, mine was developed and works under netscape 2.0, which probably makes it the first md5 implementation in javascript ever.
I have a nagging feeling pajhome's version requires at least NS3/IE3, although I haven't checked that.
At the time, after I benchmarked it and realized how slow it was to run at the time, I had serious second-thoughts about its usefulness (the 7 hashes test on the page above would take 10 to 15 seconds to run on some very reasonable desktop hardware.)
Things have gotten better, both on the CPU and the javascript speed front, and it does make a lot of sense now to use it for password submissions if you don't want to take the extra cost of SSL.
Why this is useful
by
EmCeeHawking
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· Score: 3, Interesting
I see a lot of posts here wondcering how this is useful and why not just use PGP.
I can't imagine people really trust PGP anymore. No longer open source, no longer affiliated with Phil Zimmerman... and his statement when he left was scary.
For those who don't know, Phil stated when he left that every PGP product released while he was there contained no hidden back doors. Knowing that companies like PGP were being pressured, it makes me think the creative differences were them wanting to build something in that he thought shouldn't be in.
JavaScript RULEZ!!1!
by
Vagary
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· Score: 2, Insightful
It's not yucky! JavaScript is one of the most elegant of scripting languages.
You have features like higher-order functions (well kinda), basic OO, and built-in regular expressions. C-like syntax with simplicitly totally unlike Python and Perl. And talk about platform independence! If JavaScript had just a few more libraries I think I'd advocate it as a great beginner language...
Re:JavaScript RULEZ!!1!
by
S.Lemmon
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· Score: 2, Interesting
The main problem is it's *almost* elegant, but not quite 100% there - in actualy use it always seems like you need some ugly half-assed hack to do something that should be simple.
For example, say in a form you want to validate a field as soon as the person enters it (i.e. they type a bad value and it returns focus to the field). Sounds simple right? Just trap the onblur event, test the field, and call focus() if it fails.
Not so... most browsers will ignore focus called from within onblur (because the "blur" happens after the event fires, and you can't stop it). You wind up with the silly, messy hack of setting a timer to call focus() a few milliseconds later. Really, this makes onblur almost useless for the main thing you'd expect to use it for!
It's quirks like this that makes you pull your hair out trying to do anything serious with javascript. I sometimes wonder if those setting the standards have actually ever eaten their own dog food (as the Mozilla folks like to say).
Re:JavaScript RULEZ!!1!
by
oGMo
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· Score: 2, Informative
JavaScript is pretty elegant... if you want a more "full-fledged" language that has similar elegance, even more simplicity/grace, and more libraries, try ruby. Don't let a few surface features or initial impressions fool you into thinking it's anything like Perl (or Python). It would probably make a good beginner language; it certainly makes a great "advanced" language.;-)
--
Don't think of it as a flame---it's more like an argument that does 3d6 fire damage
Well, unless your talking sever-side javascript they go hand-in-hand. One's pretty much useless without the other. It's no coincidence they were developed together. It's like saying a hammer with a bad handle isn't a bad hammer.
I'd say so too except it seems to be the behavior the current standards dictate. It's odd, but the old Netscape 4.x, for example, didn't have this problem.
I don't know if the standards body may have been influenced to use IE's behavior or something like that, but it definitely seems like usability wasn't the deciding factor.
Therefore, nobody on the net can see it under any circumstances.
Well, as mentioned on the site, that's not necessarily 100% guaranteed. You could, for example, have another page open running an active-x plug in able to sniff the content of the local page. In fact, it might not even take that much since cross site security problems have been frequent among browser bugs.
Slightly OT, but for hiding mailto links
by
WoTG
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· Score: 2, Informative
I've recently discovered (or maybe I saw it on another/. article...) this nifty
javascript "mailto" encoder. It creates drop in javascript that obliviates the need to put email addresses in cleartext on a public webpage. The JS created mailto links work just like they should. Yes, spam bots could learn to read javascript, but, they won't for a while...
Re:Slightly OT, but for hiding mailto links
by
WoTG
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· Score: 1
Neither can the blind read PNG's.
Re:Slightly OT, but for hiding mailto links
by
NickFitz
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· Score: 1
So put the email address in the alt attribute. Oh, hang on...
-- Using HTML in email is like putting sound effects on your phone calls. Just say <strong>no</strong>.
ECMAScript runs on the localhost
by
autopr0n
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· Score: 3, Insightful
If you want to, you should be able to download the page, disconnect from the internet, and still encrypt/decrypt data.
In other words, you don't really understand what's going on. Although it would be a good idea to to check the page source to make sure that it dosn't upload your data...
-- autopr0n is like, down and stuff.
shouldn't this be called ECMASCrypt?
by
autopr0n
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· Score: 4, Insightful
I mean really, people are confused enough about the difference between Java and Javascript (which basically have nothing to do with each other other then some brain-dead attempt at synergistic marketing. JS was originally going to be called Livescript)
-- autopr0n is like, down and stuff.
Re:shouldn't this be called ECMASCrypt?
by
SvendTofte
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· Score: 1
ECMAScript is just the core. It does not define the various clientside elements that this program takes advantagde of, such as using mouse input, to generate something random. Describing it as ECMAScript would be wrong. Describing it as JavaScript or JScript would, OTOH be correct.
Yeah there are some things that are best to be on the safe side with. Chances are, if you are going to encrypt something, you'll want to be sure it's foolproof. I'm sure that some exploits will come up with this method in the next month or so. That active-x idea is one for sure, and another is to mock up another site *like* this and just change the sourcecode to steal the data.
Maybe *THIS* site is safe, for now, but how long before others do up a joke site that uses the js here but pumps your data to a backend db for kicks?
I don't think the point of this is to replace SSL or password hashing.
Think AC. Think. When do you call encryption in a website? Transactions.
Actually, I call it "Encryption in a Website". What do "transactions" have to do with it? You're obviously not talking about Database Transactions, or the general meaning of the word.
-- autopr0n is like, down and stuff.
Implement RSA in java
by
autopr0n
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· Score: 3, Informative
public static byte[] encrypt(byte[] enKey, byte[] data) throws Exception{
//make sure our int is unsigned; //this means -45 --> 45 or whatever, as opposed // to not being digital signed with a public key crypto system:) byte unsigned_data[] = new byte[data.length+1]; unsigned_data[0] = 0x7f; for(int i = 0; i < data.length; i++){ unsigned_data[i+1] = data[i]; }
KeyFactory kf = KeyFactory.getInstance("RSA"); RSAPublicKey k = (RSAPublicKey)kf.generatePublic(new X509EncodedKeySpec(enKey)); BigInteger T = new BigInteger(unsigned_data); return T.modPow(k.getPublicExponent(), k.getModulus()).toByteArray(); }
//your welcome
-- autopr0n is like, down and stuff.
Re:Implement RSA in java
by
Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 2, Funny
//your welcome
What about "my" welcome? If you leave my welcome alone, I'll leave your welcome alone.
Rather then passing hash(password) send in hash(salt + password), where hash is a random string sent by the server. The server then compares the sent value to it's own hash of salt + password. If you don't want to deal with sessions, you could simply change the salt every hour or 5 minutes or whatever.
You could also do hash(salt + hash(password)), that way you don't need to keep the password in the DB.
They could compare hash(challenge + hash(password)). I.e. they have you append a challenge value to the hash of the password, and then do the same on their end with stored-hash-of-password rather then hash(password)
Also, key distribution is not a problem with public key systems.
-- autopr0n is like, down and stuff.
Re:Nope
by
Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 1, Interesting
Also, key distribution is not a problem with public key systems.
Sure it is. I am your bank. This is your bank's public key. Now encrypt your wire transfer details and deposit some of that sweet green wampum, baby!
It's so much of a problem that Certificate Authorities can exploit their positions to turn doing practically nothing into a goldmine, and even then they screw up sometimes and get social-engineered into issuing key pairs to people who are not the convicted monopolists they claim to be.
In my experience, JS is very invasive. I stay away from it at all cost. Even on the client side, do you truly believe nothing is ultimately transmitted? I'm not trying to be a troll but...oh whatever....
*snip* which means that if you're going to send the data to some server using Javascrypt, at some point you need to communicate the key. */snip*
diffie hellman? i think you will need to exchange a key at some point even with ssl. you still have the problem with a man in the middle attack. but if you control both ends and are just trying to stop people from listening in you don't need a cert. or a third party. Just a thought.:)
Diffie-Hellman is indeed an algorithm for producing a shared secret without authentication. And indeed, anything without authentication is exposed to a man-in-the-middle attack. That's why SSL doesn't use Diffie-Hellman for authentication, only for (help with) producing a shared secret key.
In SSL, the client verifies the site by means of a certificate that the site provides; this cert has nothing to do with Diffie-Hellman. The site could use SSL to verify the client identity, but this option isn't used when selling stuff to the general public, as the site has no identity it would wish to bind to the client. (Well, a client cert binding the client to a credit card might be considered useful, but until the CC companies mandate it -- and they won't -- the shopping site has no need to check it.)
Having a cert protects you from man-in-the-middle.
The problems with authentication are due to problems on the client side with binding the site's cert to the site's identity. The typical client (a web browser) does the only things it can: It verifies that it trusts the signatory on the cert (so it trusts that the information about the site's identity, as presented on the cert, is correct), and that the cert belongs to the URL displaying the page. Then it leaves it to the user to decide whether to trust the site. Of course, many sites use some third party to handle payments, leaving the poor user the question of whether to trust buystuff.com when buying from ariels.com. And some sites manage to use a cert from the wrong domain, so the browser pops up a warning. And, of course, it's not at all clear to the user how to validate the identity from a cert.
But SSL, as used on shopping sites, does give protection from a man-in-the-middle.
-- 2 dashes and a space, or just 2 dashes?
Cool, but it needs a net connection
by
CurbyKirby
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· Score: 2, Interesting
Stealing and modifying some RC4 code, I made a self-contained Javascript/PHP CipherSaber encoder/decoder.
Boring I know, but at least it can create self-decrypting HTML files where the ciphertext and decryption code is all self-contained. With such output, any* JS-enabled browser can decrypt the file without a net connection. Here's a sample (use password "test" and 1 loop). This idea can be modified to fit almost any encryption scheme; RC4 just seemed like a good mix of security and extreme ease of implementation at the time.
* This is almost guaranteed NOT to work on Safari in Mac OSX. It works on recent Firebird builds under Windows XP and RedHat 9 (and probably other things as well).
--
--
"Extra Anus Kills Four-Legged Chick" -- Headline
Encryption, only for protecting privacy?
by
imaginaryNumber
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· Score: 2, Insightful
'The sole reason for encryption is to protect privacy.'
Statements like this from developers of a 'high-security data encryption solution' make me worried.
And assertions that transparency will make software secure always presume that someone with the 'required expertise to pass judgment' will actually do so.
I thought MD5 was cracked?
Re:Encryption, only for protecting privacy?
by
devnullify
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· Score: 1
Any (traditional) encryption is brute-forceable, it just takes an exorbitant amount of cpu time to do so. IIRC, the RC5-64 challenge by RSA (a single ciphered message to decode) took something like 5 years to decode, using distributed.net's distributed computer, with 10's of thousands of nodes.
It's reasonably safe today, but it *is* decodable if you have the time (probably decades at minimum without a supercomputer at your disposal).
Re:Encryption, only for protecting privacy?
by
imaginaryNumber
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· Score: 1
I'm confused by your reply. I think you're referring to my comment about MD5 being cracked. My comment was caused by my cumulative skepticism about javascrypt, and their choice of MD5 for hashing.
MD5 was effectively broken in 1995 by Hans Dobbertin. Several cryptographers whom I respect claim that MD5's weaknesses are significant enough that people should not use it --- for digital signatures. I don't know enough to say that the crack makes MD5 good for nothing --- not even general hashes.
I looked at the RC5-64 challenge, and it didn't seem to focus on MD5. So, I'm not sure where you were going with that.
Re:Encryption, only for protecting privacy?
by
imaginaryNumber
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· Score: 1
In 1995, Hans Dobbertin published an attack that effectively broke MD5. The partial attack shed light on MD5 weaknesses, causing some to suggest to not use it. Especially since alternatives (e.g. SHA1) exist.
Useful teaching tool
by
ca1v1n
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· Score: 4, Interesting
Schneider's javascript Rijndael implementation makes a great teaching tool, because it's so easy to modify it to show intermediate steps. Sure, you can do this in any other language, but it's especially compact in javascript, and anyone who has ever programmed in ANY modern language can read javascript, which cannot be said of plenty of other languages. For my architecture class we had to implement Rijndael with synthesizable modules, and that implementation saved us countless hours, because it was so easy to tweak things in the javascript implementation that we could often save time by deliberately introducing bugs into the reference implementation and seeing if it had familiar effects. Anyone who's ever used FPGA Advantage probably knows how much of a pain in the ass it can be debugging with that alone.
This is a wonderful resource, thanks for the link.
--
Ceci n'est pas une signature
Simple script security
by
sdsykes
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· Score: 3, Informative
This is a similar javascript utility aimed at encrypting your entire web page. It is used for putting secure content on an open access web server. You can only view the content if you happen to know the key. It's very cool, and has been around for a long time. Secure, small and fast.
CRC32 is not suitable, try MD4 instead
by
cerberusti
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· Score: 1
I've been meaning to find a crypto guy to ask if I could just use CRC32 to hash the input string, since MD5 is too much Javascript to bookmark in IE. I know it's not a secure way to checksum a file, but given a CRC32 hash and part of the input, can you recover the other part? Anybody?
It would depend upon how much of the file you have compared to how much of it you need, at a minimum, it would narrow the possiblilities of what the original contained by quite a bit. The bigger concern is that CRC32 is reversible, meaning that adding the URL before you hash it would be useless for security, as it can be reversed into a CRC of just the master password. At this point, you could calculate what any of the passwords you are using are by simply running a CRC32 on the URL of the site and starting with the CRC of just the master password (it would also provide useful information to crack the master password, although this would not be necessary, as the data it protected would be exposed anyway.) In short, you still need to use a cryptographic hash.
If MD5 is too much for the browser, you may want to look into MD4. MD4 requires quite a bit less processing power to compute than MD5, and can be coded in much less space. MD5 is a safer method of hashing, however either should be suitable for what you are doing. The important thing is that the hash not be reversible.
-- I'm a signature virus. Please copy me to your signature so I can replicate.
Similar thing for Flash ActionScript
by
dodell
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· Score: 2, Interesting
I created a similar thing for Flash ActionScript called ActionCrypt; although it's still in progress. You might want to check it out; Javascript and ActionScript are very similar (as they're both based on the same syntax).
Uhmm, perhaps I'm paronoid, but shouldn't you think twice about getting security advice from John Walker?;)
Seriously, good stuff. Perhaps somebody will come up with an open, secure way like this to replace that behemoth Entrust TruePass (which only runs in browsers that are 3 or 4 releases behind in their Java support - MS JVM but no Java Plugin!).
-- Never by hatred has hatred been appeased, only by kindness - the Buddha
Ahhh the sweet smell of failure due to fear ....
by
Grizzlysmit
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· Score: 1
I had this idea myself, and abandoned it because I realized just how much of a sense of security people get from having that little "lock" in the corner*. Though there are plenty of advantages to a strictly client-side security model, I still wonder how the unwashed ignorati surfing ecommerce sites who have had "MAKE SURE YOU HAVE ENTERED AN ENCRYPTED PAGE" drilled into them will take to this sort of idea.
*also I am a poor coder
There's just nothing like it, I just love that you work out ahead of time why it is bound to fail, due to factors which you have know way of knowing are true, but you fear and paranoia say might be, so you quit before you start, thereby insuring failure.
Mate your not just a poor coder your, a gutless coder and a piss poor thinker. Mate I suffer from Major depression and anxiety Disorder, what some Americans call double depression, and I wouldn't let that piss poor set of excuses stop me doing anything. Mate your seriously in need of some basic guts, (I'm not meaning this as a troll, but really, if we all thought like that nothing would ever get done, as for how good a coder you are: team up with someone who is a good coder, especially if (s)he, is great a implimenting but needs a mate thats good has good idea's)
-- in my life God comes first.... but Linux is pretty high after that:-D Francis Smit
I'd find it hard to think of anything that was javascript based as being handy. Javascript has caused way more problems than it has solved.
I work for a company that uses javascript to do a few things for their web based apps, and it doesn't even work correctly for the few things it needs to do between browser revisions. Supporting the customers often involves having them upgrade or downgrade their browsers.
That's like saying Java and SWING go hand-in-hand. Oh wait, or do I meant Java and AWT? Or SWT? (See my point? Just because your ECMAscript interpreter only has one GUI library doesn't say jack about mine.)
Unfortunately you're not saying jack about anything.
ECMAscript and DOM are both *standards* and are intended to work together. Any personal perversion of those standards might be more useable in some local app, but is essentially useless on the web at large.
Unless you're actually foolish enough to still be confusing Java with Javascript (which I'll give you enough credit to assume you're not), DOM is what you have to work with in a standards compliant browser (if such a beast really exists - but that's another issue).
I think a beginner language should have C-like syntax (I realise Ruby's is vaguely C-like, but not enough in my opinion) if you expect your beginners to eventually be programming in the real world (full of C, Java, Perl, and PHP). (If the syntax isn't important, then why not just start them on Scheme!:)
One of the nice things about JavaScript is that every computer already has an interpreter. (Although not all have a debugger.:( Also, Ruby doesn't have a large enough user base to have ubiquitous documentation. (I haven't checked, but I doubt you can get a Ruby book at any neighbourhood bookstore.)
I can't imagine people really trust PGP anymore. No longer open source, no longer affiliated with Phil Zimmerman... and his statement when he left was scary.
PGP is not "open source", but like Solaris, source code is published, anybody can download full source at no charge.
For those who don't know, Phil stated when he left that every PGP product released while he was there contained no hidden back doors. Knowing that companies like PGP were being pressured, it makes me think the creative differences were them wanting to build something in that he thought shouldn't be in.
Interesting claim. Care to document it?
It seems to me that if Zimmermann felt that way, he wouldn't be on the PGP.Com technical board, and he wouldn't be reselling their products on his web site.
To quote Phil Zimmermann, "There is no backdoor in PGP. Get a life."
Then you would need the plaintext password in the database, because salt2 isn't constant.
Fundamentally, the exchanged data is hash(salt + [something]). Both the client and server need to know [something] in order to compute the hash, and an attacker, knowing [something], can construct the data that is sent - so you must ensure that the database on the server isn't compromised.
I had this idea myself, and abandoned it because I realized just how much of a sense of security people get from having that little "lock" in the corner*. Though there are plenty of advantages to a strictly client-side security model, I still wonder how the unwashed ignorati surfing ecommerce sites who have had "MAKE SURE YOU HAVE ENTERED AN ENCRYPTED PAGE" drilled into them will take to this sort of idea.
Then again, if some sort of certification authority could be set up for Javascrypt-ed pages where the user was somehow assured that their data was equally protected as would be over https, then things would be more preferable. However, the byzantine red-tape behind getting a cert is possibly one of the things this technology would do away with best, and it would be a pity to remove such an obvious advantage.
In any case, it's promising, and I hope it is successful.
___________________
*also I am a poor coder
this means that i can encrypt my webmail and the recepient can view it tooo gr8!
This is totally stupid. First off the js runs *locally*. The real risk is making sure the js you download is legit.
There is no risk of data going outwards though unless the js has been modified.
Someday, I'll have a real sig.
Uh, it's Javascript. The entire point is that processing is done client-side. No information is submitted to the site. There's no HTTPS or SSL because nothing is transmitted.
It's better to vote for what you want and not get it than to vote for what you don't want and get it.
- E. Debs
For example, I'd like to be able to put up a page on my web site containing a Java applet with my embedded public key.
That way I could finally remove my grandmother's AOL account from the exception list, the last obstacle standing between me and my "all incoming mail must be either signed by somebody I trust or encrypted with my public key" procmail rule.
Requiring the sender to use their own CPU cycles to encrypt messages is a classic variation on the "micropayments" approach to reducing spam volumes...
I do not deploy Linux. Ever.
Since javascript has to be the second biggest backdoor into your computer since MS Windows, it never ceases to amaze me that people can take this stuff seriously.
The encryption is suitably strong.
The problem is knowing when you're dealing with legitimate Javascrypt encryption, and when it may be some malicious code instead (see my post above regarding certification).
Also there's still no way of ensuring that your data, once received on the server-side, will be used properly. That will, as always, come down to an issue of trust between you and the vendor.
I've used javascript cryptography routines before, once in a php project for authentication, used javascript to generate an md5 hash of the password and sent the hash over http.
;)
I considered it a hack, but it's what the client wanted, and who am I, the developer, to question the client's motives? Cheap bastard, didn't want to pay for an SSL cert. Just hope no one passes the hash.
There are a number of servers that support server-side javascript. I recently had a project where a remote office needed to communicate with a servlet based webpage using RC4 ecnrypted parameters.
The remote office didn't know much programing so I wrote a RC4 and base64 implementation in Javascript for them to implement server side.
"A mind is a terrible thing to taste."
I'm also glad to see folks doing more with the capabilities within a browser. The folks that are taking this the furthest that I've seen are the folks at Technical Pursuit.
I've been poking around trying to generate Web-site passwords by hashing the hostname and a master password, and I've come up with this bookmarklet which takes the first 8 chars of the hex representation of the MD5 hash.
This means you only have to remember one master password, and each site you register for gets its own unique password - instead of using the same throwaway password all over so you've given your whole online identity to each site's admins...
I've been meaning to find a crypto guy to ask if I could just use CRC32 to hash the input string, since MD5 is too much Javascript to bookmark in IE. I know it's not a secure way to checksum a file, but given a CRC32 hash and part of the input, can you recover the other part? Anybody?
Good point. I think we are both thinking on the same frequency thangy.
How is my original post offtopic though, people of the slashdot?
I said it's neat, but I don't see a large market for it, and that its implementation seems to have security problems itself.
People these days.
Clif
clifgriffin > blog
A few years ago Me: I know Java! Silly person: Cool, you can make applets! A few less years ago Me: I know Java! Silly person: Cool, you can do DHTML! Now Me: I know Java! Silly person: So you can do encryption!
Think AC. Think. When do you call encryption in a website? Transactions. Passwords use hashing, not enc... so just financial stuff, really. I guess some places encrpyt user data, but I'd just as soon as obfuscate it with base64 and some slipping.
// stuffs password in db
Not really needed if you're over SSL & HTTPS, just if you want to keep ISP eyes away from your stuff. A discussion site doesn't really need to worry about that.
so like:
$this = md5($pass);
mailpass($pass);
userpass($this);
Then when the user signs in:
if($dbpass != md5(getpass($post_pass))) die('wrong pass dude');
Not likely to even notice that one.
Am I the only one that read the headline as:
"Java's Crypt"
Java dead already? Odd...
I thought, geez the Slashdot Trolls really *have* taken over...
For quite a good long time now (in computer terms that is) Yahoo has been doing this same thing. If you log-in without entering SSL mode, you need to have javascript enabled in your browser so that the script can MD5-encrypt your password.
Despite the whole client-side-encryption advantage, I dislike how much easier it would be to perform a man-in-the-middle, or a number of other exploits. I will admit, however, that I am quite concerned with the prospect of honeypot SSL sites, designed to steal info, but I think the former is more likely. So, for now, I am sticking with SSL. Maybe in conjunction with SSL, this would make an ideal solution. Of course, SSH would be even better...
Slashdot gets worse every day... Pipedot: News for nerds, without the corporate slant
I'm already seeing people mix the two up in this thread, let's set this down straight:
JavaScript/ECMAScript: Untyped yucky scripting language developed by Netscape (IIRC) and built into browsers so you can have image rollovers.
-- has nothing whatsoever to do with --
Java: OO, multi-threaded, multi-platform language used occasionally on websites as applets, but much more frequently on the back end for app servers and the like.
This has been a public information posting.
---- Den ene knappen er powerknapp, den andre er Bender voice knapp "Bite My Shiny Metal Ass"
NO! The data never leaves your browser. Therefore, nobody on the net can see it under any circumstances. Also, unless there is a trojan piece of javascript code that submits it to his site (a potential problem with a program in any languge) he can't possibly see it either.
Slashdot gets worse every day... Pipedot: News for nerds, without the corporate slant
The problem with hashing a password with js and then just sending the hash is that the hash effectively becomes the password. i.e. all someone needs to do is eavesdrop your http session and record the hash value. The attacker can then send that same hashed value to the server and login as you.
The server must hash the password itself or it isn't secure. Or the hash value must be protected as much as the password.
Kudos to the authors, but really, this is nothing new.
:)
Symmetric encryption in java script has been around for a long time. What the world needs(tm) is a good implementation of RSA/ElGamal asym crypto in javascript that doesn't make your computer seem like it took a hit of dank before running through primality tests and arbitrary size integer mods and pows.
Because of the nature of that problem, I don't forsee this really coming to fruition, so if you need asym, you'll be resigned to client side Java or native client implemenations.
LazyWeb MacroMedia Wish:
Another way to obtain pervasive crypto is to encourage MacroMedia to put BigInteger in their Flash faculties
It's definitely an interesting approach especially of a site that size, when you look at how much server CPU usage a full SSL login connection would take. And in the event that someone compromises a secure server, your password wouldn't be available to the attacker, only the hash.
Plus, JS is free to implement (unlike a SSL cert) so hopefully if this technique catches on, more mom-n-pop sites will wind up using it instead of a totally unencrypted login connection.
<!-- DHTML / JavaScript menu, popup tooltip, Ajax scripts -->
I see a lot of posts here wondcering how this is useful and why not just use PGP.
I can't imagine people really trust PGP anymore. No longer open source, no longer affiliated with Phil Zimmerman... and his statement when he left was scary.
For those who don't know, Phil stated when he left that every PGP product released while he was there contained no hidden back doors. Knowing that companies like PGP were being pressured, it makes me think the creative differences were them wanting to build something in that he thought shouldn't be in.
It's not yucky! JavaScript is one of the most elegant of scripting languages. You have features like higher-order functions (well kinda), basic OO, and built-in regular expressions. C-like syntax with simplicitly totally unlike Python and Perl. And talk about platform independence! If JavaScript had just a few more libraries I think I'd advocate it as a great beginner language...
Therefore, nobody on the net can see it under any circumstances.
Well, as mentioned on the site, that's not necessarily 100% guaranteed. You could, for example, have another page open running an active-x plug in able to sniff the content of the local page. In fact, it might not even take that much since cross site security problems have been frequent among browser bugs.
I've recently discovered (or maybe I saw it on another /. article...) this nifty
javascript "mailto" encoder. It creates drop in javascript that obliviates the need to put email addresses in cleartext on a public webpage. The JS created mailto links work just like they should. Yes, spam bots could learn to read javascript, but, they won't for a while...
If you want to, you should be able to download the page, disconnect from the internet, and still encrypt/decrypt data.
In other words, you don't really understand what's going on. Although it would be a good idea to to check the page source to make sure that it dosn't upload your data...
autopr0n is like, down and stuff.
I mean really, people are confused enough about the difference between Java and Javascript (which basically have nothing to do with each other other then some brain-dead attempt at synergistic marketing. JS was originally going to be called Livescript)
autopr0n is like, down and stuff.
Well, for those without Javascript capabilities you could transfer data in plaintext.
;)
I can see using this to encode passwords or the like, that way if the browser does not support encrypted form data you could do it yourself.
Then you can tell people that if the enable JavaScript on your domain they'll have enhanced security.
Yeah there are some things that are best to be on the safe side with. Chances are, if you are going to encrypt something, you'll want to be sure it's foolproof. I'm sure that some exploits will come up with this method in the next month or so. That active-x idea is one for sure, and another is to mock up another site *like* this and just change the sourcecode to steal the data.
Maybe *THIS* site is safe, for now, but how long before others do up a joke site that uses the js here but pumps your data to a backend db for kicks?
I don't think the point of this is to replace SSL or password hashing. Think AC. Think. When do you call encryption in a website? Transactions.
Actually, I call it "Encryption in a Website". What do "transactions" have to do with it? You're obviously not talking about Database Transactions, or the general meaning of the word.
autopr0n is like, down and stuff.
import java.io.*;
//make sure our int is unsigned;
//this means -45 --> 45 or whatever, as opposed
// to not being digital signed with a public key crypto system :)
import java.util.*;
import java.security.*;
import java.security.interfaces.*;
import java.security.spec.*;
import javax.crypto.*;
import javax.crypto.interfaces.*;
import javax.crypto.spec.*;
import java.math.*;
....
public static byte[] encrypt(byte[] enKey, byte[] data) throws Exception{
byte unsigned_data[] = new byte[data.length+1];
unsigned_data[0] = 0x7f;
for(int i = 0; i < data.length; i++){
unsigned_data[i+1] = data[i];
}
KeyFactory kf = KeyFactory.getInstance("RSA");
RSAPublicKey k = (RSAPublicKey)kf.generatePublic(new X509EncodedKeySpec(enKey));
BigInteger T = new BigInteger(unsigned_data);
return T.modPow(k.getPublicExponent(), k.getModulus()).toByteArray();
}
//your welcome
autopr0n is like, down and stuff.
Rather then passing hash(password) send in hash(salt + password), where hash is a random string sent by the server. The server then compares the sent value to it's own hash of salt + password. If you don't want to deal with sessions, you could simply change the salt every hour or 5 minutes or whatever.
You could also do hash(salt + hash(password)), that way you don't need to keep the password in the DB.
autopr0n is like, down and stuff.
They could compare hash(challenge + hash(password)). I.e. they have you append a challenge value to the hash of the password, and then do the same on their end with stored-hash-of-password rather then hash(password)
Also, key distribution is not a problem with public key systems.
autopr0n is like, down and stuff.
In my experience, JS is very invasive. I stay away from it at all cost. Even on the client side, do you truly believe nothing is ultimately transmitted? I'm not trying to be a troll but...oh whatever....
[SIG] Remember Mattel handheld games?
"When I find myself in times of trouble, PKZ, he comes to me.
Speaking words of wisdom, "PGP, PGP."
If you're so afraid that the post PKZ NAI PGP is tainted, don't use it.
PGP 6 and PGP 5 seem to run just fine on my PowerMac 5500/225 under OS 8.6.
I'm currently using PGP 7 Pro.
If I'm not mistaken, PKZ is now at PGP, Inc and seems happy enough with their implimentation of PGP.
Guaranteed! This comment 100% Anthrax free!
Maybe, you may find this tutorial useful: CRC and how to Reverse it.
Tired of free ipod spam sigs? Opt ou
*snip*
:)
which means that if you're going to send the data to some server using Javascrypt, at some point you need to communicate the key.
*/snip*
diffie hellman? i think you will need to exchange a key at some point even with ssl. you still have the problem with a man in the middle attack. but if you control both ends and are just trying to stop people from listening in you don't need a cert. or a third party. Just a thought.
me karma am bad
Stealing and modifying some RC4 code, I made a self-contained Javascript/PHP CipherSaber encoder/decoder.
Boring I know, but at least it can create self-decrypting HTML files where the ciphertext and decryption code is all self-contained. With such output, any* JS-enabled browser can decrypt the file without a net connection. Here's a sample (use password "test" and 1 loop). This idea can be modified to fit almost any encryption scheme; RC4 just seemed like a good mix of security and extreme ease of implementation at the time.
* This is almost guaranteed NOT to work on Safari in Mac OSX. It works on recent Firebird builds under Windows XP and RedHat 9 (and probably other things as well).
--
"Extra Anus Kills Four-Legged Chick" -- Headline
Statements like this from developers of a 'high-security data encryption solution' make me worried.
And assertions that transparency will make software secure always presume that someone with the 'required expertise to pass judgment' will actually do so.
I thought MD5 was cracked?
Schneider's javascript Rijndael implementation makes a great teaching tool, because it's so easy to modify it to show intermediate steps. Sure, you can do this in any other language, but it's especially compact in javascript, and anyone who has ever programmed in ANY modern language can read javascript, which cannot be said of plenty of other languages. For my architecture class we had to implement Rijndael with synthesizable modules, and that implementation saved us countless hours, because it was so easy to tweak things in the javascript implementation that we could often save time by deliberately introducing bugs into the reference implementation and seeing if it had familiar effects. Anyone who's ever used FPGA Advantage probably knows how much of a pain in the ass it can be debugging with that alone.
WARNING: there is a trojan on your
This is a wonderful resource, thanks for the link.
Ceci n'est pas une signature
This is a similar javascript utility aimed at encrypting your entire web page. It is used for putting secure content on an open access web server. You can only view the content if you happen to know the key. It's very cool, and has been around for a long time. Secure, small and fast.
I've been meaning to find a crypto guy to ask if I could just use CRC32 to hash the input string, since MD5 is too much Javascript to bookmark in IE. I know it's not a secure way to checksum a file, but given a CRC32 hash and part of the input, can you recover the other part? Anybody?
.
It would depend upon how much of the file you have compared to how much of it you need, at a minimum, it would narrow the possiblilities of what the original contained by quite a bit. The bigger concern is that CRC32 is reversible, meaning that adding the URL before you hash it would be useless for security, as it can be reversed into a CRC of just the master password. At this point, you could calculate what any of the passwords you are using are by simply running a CRC32 on the URL of the site and starting with the CRC of just the master password (it would also provide useful information to crack the master password, although this would not be necessary, as the data it protected would be exposed anyway.) In short, you still need to use a cryptographic hash
If MD5 is too much for the browser, you may want to look into MD4. MD4 requires quite a bit less processing power to compute than MD5, and can be coded in much less space. MD5 is a safer method of hashing, however either should be suitable for what you are doing. The important thing is that the hash not be reversible.
I'm a signature virus. Please copy me to your signature so I can replicate.
I created a similar thing for Flash ActionScript called ActionCrypt; although it's still in progress. You might want to check it out; Javascript and ActionScript are very similar (as they're both based on the same syntax).
www.sitetronics.com/wordpress
Uhmm, perhaps I'm paronoid, but shouldn't you think twice about getting security advice from John Walker? ;)
Seriously, good stuff. Perhaps somebody will come up with an open, secure way like this to replace that behemoth Entrust TruePass (which only runs in browsers that are 3 or 4 releases behind in their Java support - MS JVM but no Java Plugin!).
Never by hatred has hatred been appeased, only by kindness - the Buddha
There's just nothing like it, I just love that you work out ahead of time why it is bound to fail, due to factors which you have know way of knowing are true, but you fear and paranoia say might be, so you quit before you start, thereby insuring failure.
in my life God comes first.... but Linux is pretty high after that
Francis Smit
I'd find it hard to think of anything that was javascript based as being handy. Javascript has caused way more problems than it has solved.
I work for a company that uses javascript to do a few things for their web based apps, and it doesn't even work correctly for the few things it needs to do between browser revisions. Supporting the customers often involves having them upgrade or downgrade their browsers.
That's like saying Java and SWING go hand-in-hand. Oh wait, or do I meant Java and AWT? Or SWT? (See my point? Just because your ECMAscript interpreter only has one GUI library doesn't say jack about mine.)
One of the nice things about JavaScript is that every computer already has an interpreter. (Although not all have a debugger. :( Also, Ruby doesn't have a large enough user base to have ubiquitous documentation. (I haven't checked, but I doubt you can get a Ruby book at any neighbourhood bookstore.)
Phil Zimmermann is on the "Technical Advisory Board", along with Bruce Scheier and others.
What statement are you referring to?
- Phil Zimmerman Profiled
- Philip Zimmermann's personal response to the ADK bug,
- 2003 Defcon interview
- Phil Zimmermann & Associates LLC
Interesting claim. Care to document it?It seems to me that if Zimmermann felt that way, he wouldn't be on the PGP.Com technical board, and he wouldn't be reselling their products on his web site.
To quote Phil Zimmermann, "There is no backdoor in PGP. Get a life."
A satisfied PGP customer.
I do not deploy Linux. Ever.
Then do hash(salt1 + hash(salt2 + password)) if you really want to.
autopr0n is like, down and stuff.
> ...includes a pointer to Javascrypt, a
:-)
> Javascript-based encryption utility.
hey! Pointers and java is a no-no