> How, exactly, is the user supposed to protect themselves against rogue apps?


Don't install them.


________________________________
From: Michael Thomas <m...@mtcc.com>
To: Eran Hammer-Lahav <e...@hueniverse.com>
Cc: "oauth@ietf.org" <oauth@ietf.org>
Sent: Tuesday, September 6, 2011 11:23 AM
Subject: Re: [OAUTH-WG] problem statement

Eran Hammer-Lahav wrote:
> I agree. If you are going to install a native app, you better trust it not to 
> do bad things. Grabbing your password is the least interesting thing such an 
> app can abuse. I don't see any need to change the v2 draft. 

How, exactly, is the user supposed to protect themselves against rogue apps?
It sounds like the solution is to tell them to never use oauth in an app at all.

Is oauth only intended to be used on standalone trustable web browsers? I don't 
recall
seeing that anywhere.

Mike

> 
> EHL
> 
> On Sep 6, 2011, at 11:10, "Igor Faynberg" <igor.faynb...@alcatel-lucent.com> 
> wrote:
> 
>> Mike,
>> 
>> You've got the problem statement right: allowing the user to authorize  
>> resource access to another party without divulging user's credentials is the 
>> objective of OAuth. You are also right in that the attack you have described 
>> defies the whole purpose of OAuth.  I do not think though that it is related 
>> to OAuth per se.
>> 
>> To this end, the security work led by Torsten has thoroughly analyzed the 
>> protocol and specified protection against multiple protocol attacks.  From 
>> what you described, it appears to me that the attack you mention is not 
>> related to the protocol but rather to the user's environment.  There is no 
>> possible protection from key loggers that a protocol can implement. I could 
>> be mistaken; in any case, it looks like the problem rests with the 
>> implementation of WebView.
>> 
>> If I am wrong, I would appreciate a detailed description of what happened.
>> 
>> Igor
>> 
>> On 9/6/2011 1:40 PM, Michael Thomas wrote:
>>> Hi all,
>>> 
>>> Barry suggested that I might subscribe and explain what I sent him.
>>> 
>>> My basic problem is that in neither the protocol nor the threats drafts,
>>> I can't seem to find what problem is actually trying to be solved with
>>> oauth, and what assumptions you're making about various elements.
>>> 
>>> Here's what I did. I've written an app, and I wanted re-integrate the
>>> ability to send tweets after they deprecated Basic. So the app has a
>>> webView (android, iphone...) which it obviously completely controls.
>>> With oauth, the webview UA will ultimately redirect off to Twitter's
>>> site to collect the user's credentials and grant my app's backend an
>>> access token (sorry if I get terminology screwed up, i'm just coming
>>> up to speed).
>>> 
>>> What occurs to me is that webview affords exactly zero protection from
>>> my client (ie, the app) from getting the user's twitter credentials. All
>>> I have to do is set up a keypress handler on that webview and in a few
>>> minutes of hacking I have a key logger. etc.
>>> 
>>> So what I can't tell is whether this is a "problem" or not, because I
>>> don't know what problem you're trying to solve. If the object of oauth
>>> isn't to keep user/server credentials out of the hands of a third party,
>>> then what is it trying to solve? Is there an expectation that the
>>> UA is trusted by the user/server? What happens when that's not the case?
>>> 
>>> Regardless of whether I'm misunderstanding, it would sure be nice to have
>>> both the problem and your assumptions laid out, hopefully with some 
>>> prominence
>>> so you don't get these sort of dumb questions.
>>> 
>>> Mike
>>> _______________________________________________
>>> OAuth mailing list
>>> OAuth@ietf.org
>>> https://www.ietf.org/mailman/listinfo/oauth
>> _______________________________________________
>> OAuth mailing list
>> OAuth@ietf.org
>> https://www.ietf.org/mailman/listinfo/oauth
> _______________________________________________
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> https://www.ietf.org/mailman/listinfo/oauth

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