Digital Certificate Authority (CA) Trustwave revealed that it has issued a digital certificate that enabled an unnamed private company to spy on SSL-protected connections within its corporate network, an action that prompted the Mozilla community to debate whether the CA's root certificate should be removed from Firefox. . The certificate issued by Trustwave is known as a subordinate root and enabled its owner to sign digital certificates for virtually any domain on the Internet. The certificate was to be used within a private network within a data loss prevention system, Trustwave said in a blog post on Saturday. The link for this article located at InfoWorld is no longer available. . Trustwave has revealed a subordinate root certificate that poses SSL security issues in Firefox.. Trustwave Digital Certificate, SSL Security, Certificate Authority Issues. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
According to Tor developer Jacob Appelbaum and a blog posting by the Mozilla Foundation, the Comodo SSL Certification Authority may have been compromised. As a consequence, criminals apparently obtained nine certificates for web sites that already existed, including addons.mozilla.org. . There is no official statement on whether the situation was caused by insufficient checks during the certification process or by a breach of Comodo's infrastructure. However, what initially appeared to be a problem for Comodo is now forcing browser developers to take counter measures and release updates. Otherwise, criminals could, for example, redirect users to a bogus Firefox plug-in page and offer them infected add-ons to install The link for this article located at H Security is no longer available. . Web browser creators are under strain to release updates in light of possible SSL vulnerabilities caused by Comodo, which could lead to security threats.. SSL Breach, Browser Security, Comodo Updates, Certificate Exploits. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
The posting of a trick SSL certificate for https://www.paypal.com/us/home and its pertaining private key on the Full Disclosure security mailing list should finally force Microsoft, Google and Apple into releasing updates to fix the NULL prefix vulnerability. Phishers, for example, could use the certificate to disguise their servers as legitimate banking servers . Inserting a null character in a certificate's common name will prompt vulnerable browsers to only read up to this character, although the certificate may have actually been issued for a different domain. The current case tricks a browser into thinking that it has detected a valid certificate for https://www.paypal.com/us/home. The hole has been known to exist in various browsers for several weeks. So far, of all the popular browsers, only Firefox and Opera have not fallen for the trick. The link for this article located at H Security is no longer available. . Adding a null character within a certificate's subject name causes susceptible browsers to interpret only the segment preceding this character.. PayPal SSL Exploit, NULL Prefix Threat, Browser Security Issue. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
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