A team of academics revealed a new cryptographic attack this week that can break TLS encrypted traffic, allowing attackers to monitor and steal data that was previously considered secure.
This new attack does not have a fancy name as most cryptographic attacks tend to have, but it still seems to work in the latest version of the TLS protocol, TLS 1.3, which was released on last spring and is considered the safest.
The new cryptographic attack on TLS is not new, but another variant of the original Bleichenbacher attack.
The original attack was named after the Swiss cryptographer Daniel Bleichenbacher, who presented in 1998 a first attack against systems they used RSA encryption in collaboration with the operation codifications PKCS#1 v1.
Over the years, cryptographers have made several variations on the original attack, as you can see in the links below: 2003, 2012, 2012, 2014, 2014, 2014, 2015, 2016 (DROWN), 2017 (ROBOT)And 2018.
The reason for all these variations of the attack is because the authors of the TLS encryption protocol decided to add countermeasures to make it more difficult to guess the RSA decryption key, instead of completely replacing the insecure RSA algorithm.
These countermeasures are described in section 7.4.7.1 of the TLS standard (RFC 5246), which many hardware manufacturers and software developers have misinterpreted or not followed exactly the steps it sets out.
The latest variations of the Bleichenbacher attack were described in a technical publication published last Wednesday: "The 9 lives of CAT Bleichenbacher: New cache attacks in the TLS application" in Greek and "The 9 Lives of Bleichenbacher's CAT: New Cache ATtacks on TLS Implementations”The original title of the PDF.
Seven researchers from around the world have discovered (again) another way to break RSA PKCS # 1 v1.5, the most common RSA configuration used to encrypt TLS connections today.
Besides breaking TLS, the new Bleichenbacher attack works great for the new one as well protocol Google's QUIC encryption.
“The attack exploits a side channel leak via timings accessof the cache to crack RSA key exchanges of TLS applications,” the researchers report.
Even the latest version of the TLS 1.3 protocol, where the use of RSA has been kept to a minimum, can be downgraded to TLS 1.2, where the new variant of the Bleichenbacher attack operates.
"We tested nine different TLS applications and all seven were found to be vulnerable: OpenSSL, Amazon s2n, MbedTLS, Apple CoreTLS, Mozilla NSS, WolfSSLAnd GnuTLS", Say the researchers.
Updates of all libraries affected by the attack were published simultaneously in November 2018, when the researchers published an initial draft of their research.
For more details, there are the following CVEs: CVE-2018-12404, CVE-2018-19608, CVE-2018-16868, CVE-2018-16869 and CVE-2018-16870.
The two libraries that were not found to be vulnerable are BearSSL and Google BoringSSL.