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Passport flaw threatens users' accounts

realnischa   on 08 May 2003 - 10:41 · 9 comments & 1752 views

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A serious security flaw in Microsoft's Passport service put users' accounts, including their personal information and credit card numbers, at risk of being hijacked.

The flaw, in Passport's password recovery mechanism, allowed an attacker to change the password on any account to which the user name is known. The flaw was disclosed late Wednesday night on the security mailing list Full Disclosure.

The simplicity of the attack and the high value of the data frequently stored in Passport accounts combined to make the vulnerability critical.

"It is hardly an exploit or even vulnerability; it's just a flaw, in their Web-application logic," the person who posted the vulnerability said in an e-mail to CNET News.com. "The flaw has been there since long time, I just discovered it recently," wrote the individual who identified himself as Muhammad Faisal Rauf Danka. He claimed to be a Pakistani security consultant and MBA candidate.

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News source: Cnet News


Microsoft has touted Passport as a technological centerpiece in the company's Web services future. Passport accounts are central repositories for a user's online data and can include personal information such as birthdays and credit card numbers as well as acting as the single key for the user's online accounts.

Microsoft moved quickly to prevent online vandals from exploiting the issue. The advisory was posted just before 8 p.m. PDT, and by 11:30 p.m., the software giant had essentially turned off the vulnerable feature. "We have shut down all ability to reset passwords," said Sean Sundwall, spokesman for the company.

The flaw allowed a single Web address--or URL--to be used to request a password reset from the Passport servers. The URL contains the e-mail address of the account to be changed and the address where the attacker would like to have the reset message sent. By entering the single line into a Web browser an attacker can cause the Passport servers to return a link that allows an account's password to be reset. By following the link returned in the message, the attacker can change the password for the victim's account.

Danka claims to have found the issue after a friend's account had been hacked.

"Later, my friend gave the 'attacker' my passport address as a challenge, and mine was compromised as well," he wrote in the e-mail. Not long after, he figured out how the attacker had compromised the accounts.

The security consultant also said that he had repeatedly sent e-mail warnings to Microsoft's abuse and security addresses at Hotmail.com to no avail. However, he didn't send an e-mail to Microsoft's standard security contact point, secure@microsoft.com.

It wasn't clear Wednesday night whether the flaw affected all Passport accounts, or a smaller subset of accounts. Several security experts confirmed that the flaw could be exploited in the manner described by Danka.

"I tried it on my own account and I tried it on my friends' accounts, with full permission; it worked on all occasions," said Wayne Chang, a student at the University of Massachusetts at Amherst. "This is definitely a big security flaw."

The issue couldn't be confirmed by everyone. In some cases, security experts didn't get an e-mail back from the server.

"I just tried again, and have not yet received an e-mail with the change password link in it," Marc Slemko, a Seattle-area software engineer, wrote to CNET News.com in an e-mail. "That either means it is much slower now or has been disabled."

The engineer believed Microsoft would rally the security teams to handle the vulnerability, as the issue had enormous implications for customers.

Post a comment · Send to friend Comments · There are 9 additional comments
#1 hobsgrg on 08 May 2003 - 10:50
I hope this is sorted out quick
#2 antsy on 08 May 2003 - 11:06
hows it done?
#3 TranceSphere on 08 May 2003 - 11:12
omg, lol, this is sssssoooo old I used it once stole my m8's e-mail account (he never used it)
(2 replies) #4 Mr. Black on 08 May 2003 - 12:09
Why is it Microsoft software, products or services that always have insane amounts of holes, bugs and problems? They need to make better choices in hiring developers who actually [b]know[/b] how to code properly.
#4.1 edgrale on 08 May 2003 - 15:10
They need people who can design stuff before they start to code...
#4.2 JaggedFlame on 08 May 2003 - 17:45
[neoquote=#4.0 by Mr. Black]Why is it Microsoft software, products or services that always have insane amounts of holes, bugs and problems?[/neoquote] The same reason EVERY PIECE OF SOFTWARE HAS AMOUNTS OF HOLES, BUGS, AND PROBLEMS. If you ever used Linux, you would know what I'm talking about. Nothing's perfect.
#5 ThunderRiver on 08 May 2003 - 12:45
Does't work for me..
(1 reply) #6 TC17 on 08 May 2003 - 19:03
Microsoft charges big bucks for their software, and this is what you get for it. What a deal. Not! Microsoft I'm sure could care less.
#6.1 BarryJ on 08 May 2003 - 19:30
actually, this is free. so, meh.

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