Data Protection

Vulnerability Allowed Hackers to Steal iCloud Keychain Secrets

Apple has recently patched a Keychain vulnerability that could have been exploited by man-in-the-middle (MitM) attackers to obtain sensitive user information. The details of the flaw were disclosed on Monday by the researcher who reported it to the vendor.

<p><strong><span><span>Apple has recently patched a Keychain vulnerability that could have been exploited by man-in-the-middle (MitM) attackers to obtain sensitive user information. The details of the flaw were disclosed on Monday by the researcher who reported it to the vendor.</span></span></strong></p>

Apple has recently patched a Keychain vulnerability that could have been exploited by man-in-the-middle (MitM) attackers to obtain sensitive user information. The details of the flaw were disclosed on Monday by the researcher who reported it to the vendor.

One of the many security holes patched by Apple in late March in iOS, macOS and other products is CVE-2017-2448, a Keychain weakness discovered by Alex Radocea of Longterm Security.

According to Radocea, the flaw affects the iCloud Keychain, which stores account names, passwords, credit card data, and Wi-Fi network information. The iCloud Keychain sync feature allows users to synchronize their keychain so that passwords and other data are accessible from all their Apple devices.

Apple designed the iCloud Keychain to be highly secure and it told customers that not even the NSA can access their secrets. The sync feature uses end-to-end encryption to exchange data — the encryption relies on a syncing identity key unique to each device, and the encryption keys are never exposed to iCloud.

Data is transmitted via the iCloud Key-Value Store (KVS), which applications use to synchronize the data of iCloud users. Communications between apps and the KVS are arbitrated by “syncdefaultsd” and other iCloud system services. The KVS is tied to each user’s account and accessing it requires the targeted account’s credentials or intercepted iCloud authentication tokens.

The vulnerability found by Radocea is related to Apple’s open source implementation of the Off-The-Record (OTR) messaging protocol. Devices can only transmit OTR data if they are part of a group of trust called “signed syncing circle,” which is signed with a syncing identity key associated with each device and a key derived from the user’s iCloud password. Joining the circle requires permission from an existing device and user interaction.

The researcher discovered that, due to improper error handling, the signature verification routine for OTR could have been bypassed, allowing an MitM attacker to negotiate an OTR session without needing the syncing identity key.

While an attacker cannot exploit this vulnerability to join a signing circle, it does allow them to impersonate other devices in the circle when keychain data is being synced, and intercept passwords and other secrets, the expert said.

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“For an adversary to gain access to user Keychain secrets, an adversary could leverage this flaw with one of several capabilities to receive keychain secrets. First, assuming that two-factor authentication is not enabled for the user, an attacker with the victim’s iCloud password would be able to directly access and modify entries in the user’s iCloud KVS data,” Radocea said in a blog post this week.

“Second, a sophisticated adversary with backend access to iCloud KVS would also be able to modify entries to perform the attack,” the researcher added. “Third, the ‘syncdefaultsd’ service does not perform certificate pinning for TLS communications. Without key-pinning, a maliciously issued TLS certificate from any trusted system Certificate Authority could intercept TLS sessions to the iCloud KVS web servers and also perform the attack.”

Radocea has pointed out that it’s often easy for attackers to obtain iCloud passwords, especially since many people set weak passwords or use the same one across multiple online services.

Apple said it addressed the vulnerability through improved validation for the authenticity of OTR packets.

Related Reading: New OS X Backdoor Steals Mac Keychain Content

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