Heartbleed flaw was unknown before disclosure

One of the most serious software flaws to affect the Internet, nicknamed 'Heartbleed,' was likely unknown before it was publicly disclosed, according to new research.


The finding puts to rest fears that government spying agencies may have been exploiting the flaw for surveillance activities.


Widespread attacks using Heartbleed only began about a day after information about it became public, according to the paper, published by researchers at several U.S. universities.


'We find no evidence of exploitation prior to the vulnerability's public disclosure, but we detect subsequent exploit attempts from almost 700 sources beginning less than 24 hours after disclosure,' they wrote.


Heartbleed was a flaw in older versions of OpenSSL, a widely used cryptographic library that encrypts data traffic between a client and a server. In some cases, Heartbleed leaked memory from a server, potentially exposing login credentials, cryptographic keys and other private data.


Its disclosure on April 7 set off a scramble to patch. Upwards of 55 percent of the top one million websites ranked by traffic by Alexa were affected, many of which were quickly patched.


To figure out if attacks had been executed against OpenSSL prior to disclosure of the flaw, the researchers analyzed network traffic collected by passive traps at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, the National Energy Research Scientific Computing Center and a honeypot on Amazon's EC2 network.


The networks collectively had full packet traces available from around November 2013 through April. No tell-tale signs that attackers were trying to exploit Heartbleed were found, although such scanning for vulnerable servers 'could have occurred during other time periods,' they cautioned.


The first attacks were detected 21 hours and 29 minutes after Heartbleed became public from a host at the University of Latvia, they wrote. Soon after, the attacks came fast and furious.


Two days after Heartbleed was disclosed, about 11 percent of the top 1 million sites ranked by Alexa were still vulnerable. The top 500 sites, however, had all patched within that same period.


Three weeks after disclosure, the researchers began contacting the operators of more than 200,000 hosts that were still vulnerable, a laborious undertaking. They did that by extracting the 'abuse' email contacts from Whois records.


'When we notified network operators of the unpatched systems in their address space, the rate of patching increased by 47 percent,' the paper read. 'Many of the operators reported they had intended to patch, but that they had missed the system we detected.'


The success of that effort challenges the belief that mass notifications of vulnerabilities would be ineffective or too difficult, they wrote.


'Future work is needed to understand what factor influence the effectiveness of mass notifications and determine how best to perform them,' they wrote.


Send news tips and comments to jeremy_kirk@idg.com. Follow me on Twitter: @jeremy_kirk


This story, 'Heartbleed flaw was unknown before disclosure' was originally published by .



Comments

Popular posts from this blog

5 Reasons iPhone 6 Won't Be Popular

Eset nod32 ativirus 6 free usernames and passwords

Apple's self