Neowin needs HTTPS login from main, not just forums


Recommended Posts

Some prick sniffed my password at a school computer lab. Is there any way for Neowin to get a secure logon? I know these things cost money, but it's such an easy target for any jackass with a computer. Hell, even a self-generated certificate (not from Thawte, Verisign, etc) would at least give some of us the option of using it.

Edited by boogerjones

A public PC is always going to be an issue. If this 'prick' had used a USB keylogger / PS2 keylogger, would you want that Neowin implemented a voice recognition login?

I don't see the need for HTTPS login on Neowin. It's a forum - not a financial institution. If its that much of an issue, use a seperate password on things like forums than important things.

If this 'prick' had used a USB keylogger / PS2 keylogger, would you want that Neowin implemented a voice recognition login?

Gimme a break. Why should cars have locks if keys can be duplicated? Yes, somebody could potentially use a TEMPEST attack and get my password, but these kinds of thieves will use the easiest possible method. And right now it's pretty easy to get my password for Neowin. SSL is a pretty standard implementation for logging in to just about any site.

And I do use a separate password. But the content of the site is not the issue. I really don't care if somebody can login to my profile. But I think it's just a bad security practice on Neowin's end.

Damn...thats a good point! Cars have locks yet keys can be duplicated....maybe they need some sort of SSL to make them secure. A keypad in each car maybe?

If someone on a public PC wants to get hold of your password, they'll do it. Packet sniffing a network for unsecured passwords is far more difficult than a keylogger, so you'll never be safe.

Talk to someone in your college's ICT department if this is going on there, or only login from home. Its unlikely that any website putting SSL onto their site will have any major benefit to stopping people on public computers being targetted.

I mean can you even be 100% sure that they didn't just have a keylogger installed or something to that effect? Can you be sure that the public machines are 100% trojan secure? It may not even have happened the way you think it did.

There are far far bigger sites out there that don't use SSL connections to login to their servers. Myspace anyone?

Wow, I can't believe all the strong opposition to what is a simple, effective, and potentially free security measure. It has nothing to do with what is stored on Neowin or what the policy of other forums is.

I'm not opposing it so much as I'm asking what use it would be to implement.

Do self-signed certificates get along well with browser security? If the browser doesn't trust a certificate's issuer, then it inherintly does not trust the certificate. Self-signed certificates are their own issuer, which causes issues for situations like this.

Honestly I think SSL is overkill in this case. A self-signed certificate will give everyone an error everytime they try and login and a trusted signed SSL, while not terribly expensive ($60 for a basic, not wildcard one with virtually no financial backup) would not be money well spent in my opinion.

Then theres the implementation of it into Invision (the forum software Neowin runs)

Do self-signed certificates get along well with browser security? If the browser doesn't trust a certificate's issuer, then it inherintly does not trust the certificate. Self-signed certificates are their own issuer, which causes issues for situations like this.

The browser will prompt you if you trust the self-signed certificate. There's always free signing 3rd parties too like cacert.org. Just import their root certificate and any site signed with that will be trusted.

vBulletin implemented a Javascript hashing mechanism so that user passwords are hashed before they're sent to the server. That could probably be modded into IPB for much less effort.

So instead of someone sniffing your password, they sniff the password hash, which is just as good as a password... Great solution (Y) Whatever is sent to the server needs to be encrypted so it can't be sniffed. That's the whole point. Sending the server "asdf" instead of "password" does nothing if an anonymous listener can see it on the network.

The browser will prompt you if you trust the self-signed certificate. There's always free signing 3rd parties too like cacert.org. Just import their root certificate and any site signed with that will be trusted.

Yeah, every user would have to import SOME certificate, whether it's Neowin's or cacert.org, or whoever's... That's not a solution. Why do you think people pay so much for Verisign certificates? Because they're trusted. I've never heard of cacert.org and certantly don't trust them to vouch for another website...

So instead of someone sniffing your password, they sniff the password hash, which is just as good as a password... Great solution (Y) Whatever is sent to the server needs to be encrypted so it can't be sniffed. That's the whole point. Sending the server "asdf" instead of "password" does nothing if an anonymous listener can see it on the network.

Yeah, every user would have to import SOME certificate, whether it's Neowin's or cacert.org, or whoever's... That's not a solution. Why do you think people pay so much for Verisign certificates? Because they're trusted. I've never heard of cacert.org and certantly don't trust them to vouch for another website...

actually i have a starter SSL certificate from namecheap.com setup for cpanel on a server and it cost me a $16 :yes:

its reconised by most browsers, shows up as being signed by Eqifax and works fine with firefox and Ie6+ (maybe older versions of ie also, dont know cus i only run 6 and 7) also works with opera and safari as far as i can remember (dont use them much tend to use firefox all the time)

so no they don't need to cost the earth! ;)

  • 6 years later...
  • 1 year later...

Since the other topic was locked, I would post a couple of my observations here:

 

-- The login form for the credentials is served over unsecured HTTP

-- The logout action consists of this URL 

https://www.neowin.net/forum/index.php?app=core&module=global&section=login&do=logout&k=

And the "k" -- I guess that means "key" -- value is a constant 32 char hash that does not vary between sessions. Now I am not a security whiz, but I think that both of those are not good things and should be corrected.

This topic is now closed to further replies.
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Posts

    • Promoting is fine - advertising, informing, whatever.  But interrupting your PAID OS experience is not.
    • Why does a PDF software need an audio player inside it. What is this bloat.
    • Sadly, that is the state of things. It's basically considered acceptable for any random app running on your computer to use 1+ GB of RAM, and install space, lol, no one even seems to consider that.
    • EU Commission explains why Siri AI isn't launching in the EU, and Apple is to blame by Hamid Ganji Image via Apple This week at Apple’s 2026 developers conference, the iPhone maker unveiled the upgraded Siri after more than a year of delays. The new Siri is now called Siri AI, and it's powered by Google Gemini models. While Siri AI is preparing to roll out to Apple users worldwide, the company’s EU customers might need to wait much longer before getting their hands on the new assistant. Shortly after announcing iOS 27, Apple said in a blog post that Siri AI is not coming to the EU anytime soon due to hurdles posed by the Digital Markets Act (DMA) and other regulatory requirements. To comply with the DMA in the EU, Apple apparently needs to open Siri AI to rival assistants on iOS 27 and iPadOS 27. Apple has refused to do so, which has resulted in Siri AI being delayed for its EU users. The company argues that such a move would put users’ privacy at risk. In a statement to Neowin, a European Commission spokesperson provided more details about why Siri AI will not be rolled out to Apple customers in the region. The statement first noted that the DMA does not prohibit Apple from launching its services in the EU and that the company is simply required to comply with the law. The European Commission spokesperson added that, since Apple is considered a gatekeeper under the DMA, it is “obliged to give third parties access to equivalent features as they give to its own products. Because the DMA is precisely about giving users the choice to use the product they find best suits their needs.” Moreover, the spokesperson said the Commission has been in contact with Apple, though the company “did not develop proposals for DMA compliant interoperability solutions.” The statement also clarified that companies designated as gatekeepers cannot leverage their status and products, such as operating systems, to favor their own AI services. The first public beta of iOS 27 will roll out next month, while the stable version is expected to launch this fall following the release of the iPhone 18 series. It remains unclear when Apple will be able to resolve its DMA-related compliance issues with the European Commission and bring Siri AI to its European customers.
  • Recent Achievements

    • One Month Later
      pinnclepd earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • First Post
      X-No-file earned a badge
      First Post
    • One Month Later
      johnjacobb40 earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • One Year In
      Primer1st earned a badge
      One Year In
    • Experienced
      JayZJay went up a rank
      Experienced
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      510
    2. 2
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      214
    3. 3
      +Edouard
      145
    4. 4
      Steven P.
      88
    5. 5
      ATLien_0
      83
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!