Microsoft seems to have fixed some security issues in Microsoft Teams that could be used in chain attacks to retrieve user accounts - all with the help of a .GIF file.
CyberArk researchers they announced today the vulnerability of a subdomain, which combined with a malicious .GIF file, could be used to "harvest data of a user and finally the acquisition of all Teams accounts of an organization”.
The team said security issues affected Microsoft Teams on both desktops and the web version of the program.
The Microsoft communications platform seems to have gained an expanded customer base like other competing services (Zoom, GoToMeeting, etc.) due to the advent of COVID-19. Microsoft Teams is used to keep businesses running, and among other things it offers corporate data sharing. This makes the application a very tempting target for hackers.
During the review of the platform by CyberArk, the team found that each time the application is opened, the Teams client creates a new temporary access badge, which is authenticated through the subdomain login.microsoftonline.com. Other tokens are created to access other supported services such as SharePoint and Outlook.
They noticed that two cookies were used to restrict access to the content, "authtoken" and "skypetoken_asm." So they used these files to get a Sskype badge, sending it to teams.microsoft.com and the subdomains it uses. In two of them they were able to perform a subdomain takeover.
"If an attacker can somehow force a user to visit subdomains occupied (by hackers), the victim browser will send a cookie to the attacker's server. "The attacker (after acquiring the authtoken) can create a distinctive Skype", the team states. "After all this, the attacker can steal the data of the victim's accounts."
However, the chain of attack is complicated, as it was necessary for the attacker to issue a certificate for all the violated subdomains subdomains.
But since subdomains were vulnerable, this challenge was overcome by either sending a malicious link to the subdomain or sending a .GIF file to a group. This could lead to creation of the required token needed to breach a victim's Microsoft Teams session, as the image alone to be viewed could affect more than one person at a time.
CyberArk has released a PoC showing how attacks could have taken place, along with a script that could be used to stop Teams conversations.
The researchers collaborated with the Microsoft Security Response Center (MSRC) as part of the Coordinated program Vulnerability Disclosure (CVD) to report their findings.
CyberArk reported the flaw on March 23. On the same day, the company from Redmond fixed the incorrect DNS settings of the two subdomains, and on April 20th an update was released that fully fixes the problem.