nanog mailing list archives

RE: Security team successfully cracks SSL using 200 PS3's and MD5 flaw.


From: Skywing <Skywing () valhallalegends com>
Date: Sat, 3 Jan 2009 11:56:57 -0600

What's the cost to switching to something other than MD5 here, though?

I agree that users not checking download links is likely more probablistic.  But as checking the sums is already 
entirely a manual process, what's the trouble with switching to sha256 now abd stating this in the DSA mails?

No, there probably won't be another major md5 break in six months.  Or maybe a year, or two, or...

However, the both of us well know that the attacks here won't do anything but get better.  Even if it's not a thing to 
sound a fire drill about, I have to admit that hearing that Debian's going to continue moving forward with md5 until an 
unspecified somewhen date in the future is a bit disappointing.  Not (yet) the end of the world, but I would like to 
understand the reason (cost) for the pushback here.

– S

-----Original Message-----
From: Florian Weimer <fw () deneb enyo de>
Sent: Saturday, January 03, 2009 08:23
To: Skywing <Skywing () valhallalegends com>
Cc: Steven M. Bellovin <smb () cs columbia edu>; NANOG <nanog () nanog org>
Subject: Re: Security team successfully cracks SSL using 200 PS3's and MD5 flaw.


Then again, I just got yet another Debian DSA mail which has
plaintext download links for new binaries.  The integrity
verification mechanism for said binaries is, you guessed it:
PGP-signed md5sums.

I can assure you that you will continue to receive these messages for
a while (unless you unsubscribe from the relevant mailing lists).

Our rationale is that in order to carry out currently known attacks on
MD5, you need to create a twin of documents, one evil and one
harmless.  In Debian's case, we prepare the data we sign on our
trusted infrastructure.  If someone can sneak in an evil twin due to a
breach, more direct means of attack are available.

In practice, the download links themselves are the larger problem
because users might use them without checking anything.  Eventually,
they will go away, together with the MD5 hashes.  Newer versions of
APT also use the SHA-256 checksums embedded in the Release and
Packages files.


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