CVE-2022-34689 - Authentication Bypass by Spoofing

Severity

75%

Complexity

39%

Confidentiality

60%

Windows CryptoAPI Spoofing Vulnerability.

CVSS 3.1 Base Score 7.5. CVSS Attack Vector: network. CVSS Attack Complexity: low. CVSS Vector: (CVSS:3.1/AV:N/AC:L/PR:N/UI:N/S:U/C:N/I:H/A:N).

Demo Examples

Authentication Bypass by Spoofing

CWE-290

The following code authenticates users.


               
}
authenticated = true;

The authentication mechanism implemented relies on an IP address for source validation. If an attacker is able to spoof the IP, they may be able to bypass the authentication mechanism.

Authentication Bypass by Spoofing

CWE-290

Both of these examples check if a request is from a trusted address before responding to the request.


               
}
}
n = recvfrom(sd, msg, MAX_MSG, 0, (struct sockaddr *) & cli, &clilen);

               
}
}
DatagramPacket sp =new DatagramPacket(out,out.length, IPAddress, port); outSock.send(sp);

The code only verifies the address as stored in the request packet. An attacker can spoof this address, thus impersonating a trusted client

Authentication Bypass by Spoofing

CWE-290

The following code samples use a DNS lookup in order to decide whether or not an inbound request is from a trusted host. If an attacker can poison the DNS cache, they can gain trusted status.


               
}
trusted = true;
trusted = false;

               
}
trusted = true;

               
}
trusted = true;

IP addresses are more reliable than DNS names, but they can also be spoofed. Attackers can easily forge the source IP address of the packets they send, but response packets will return to the forged IP address. To see the response packets, the attacker has to sniff the traffic between the victim machine and the forged IP address. In order to accomplish the required sniffing, attackers typically attempt to locate themselves on the same subnet as the victim machine. Attackers may be able to circumvent this requirement by using source routing, but source routing is disabled across much of the Internet today. In summary, IP address verification can be a useful part of an authentication scheme, but it should not be the single factor required for authentication.

Overview

Type

Microsoft Windows

First reported 2 years ago

2022-10-11 19:15:00

Last updated 2 years ago

2022-10-12 14:44:00

Affected Software

Microsoft Windows 10 64-bit

Microsoft Windows 10 1607 32-bit

1607

Microsoft Windows Server 2016

Microsoft Windows 10 32-bit

Microsoft Windows 10 1607 64-bit

1607

Microsoft Windows RT 8.1

Microsoft Windows 10 1809 on ARM64

1809

Microsoft Windows 10 1809 on x64

1809

Microsoft Windows Server 2012

Microsoft Windows Server 2019

Stay updated

ExploitPedia is constantly evolving. Sign up to receive a notification when we release additional functionality.

Get in touch

If you'd like to report a bug or have any suggestions for improvements then please do get in touch with us using this form. We will get back to you as soon as we can.