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Private Keys Stolen Within Hours From Heartbleed OpenSSL Site

Billly Gates (198444) writes "It was reported when heartbleed was discovered that only passwords would be at risk and private keys were still safe. Not anymore. Cloudfare launched the heartbleed challenge on a new server with the openSSL vulnerability and offered a prize to whoever could gain the private keys. Within hours several researchers and a hacker got in and got the private signing keys. Expect many forged certificates and other login attempts to banks and other popular websites in the coming weeks unless the browser makers and CA's revoke all the old keys and certificates."

3 of 151 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Oh, man, what a mess by sphealey · · Score: 4, Interesting

    From the linked site: "He sent at least 2.5 million requests over the course of the day." So, no rate limiters, anti-DDS protection, or other active countermeasures in operation. Reasonable for this challenge but not overly realistic.

    sPh

  2. There is more where that came from by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Coverity is a static analysis tool. It was tested on the source code with the Heartbleed vulnerability and did not find it. The developers of Coverity made a proof-of-concept modification to treat variables as tainted if they're subjected to endianess conversion, based on the assumption that such variables contain external and thus potentially hostile data. With this modification, Coverity finds the Heartbleed bug, as described in this blog post. Note the comment below the screenshot: "As you might guess, additional locations in OpenSSL are also flagged by this analysis, but it isn’t my place to share those here." This may just be a consequence of not detecting all ways in which a tainted variable is sanitized, or it may point to more problems.

    1. Re:There is more where that came from by InsaneLampshade · · Score: 4, Interesting

      They thought malloc was too slow. http://www.tedunangst.com/flak...