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Cloudflare Bug Exposed

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For months, there has been a bug in the Cloudflare content optimization systems that has exposed sensitive information sent by users to websites that use the company’s content delivery network.

The data included passwords, session cookies, authentication tokens and even private messages. Cloudflare acts as a reverse proxy for millions of websites, including those of major internet services and Fortune 500 companies, for which it provides security and content optimization services behind the scenes.

As a part of that process, the company’s systems modify HTML pages as they pass through its servers in order to rewrite HTTP links to HTTPS, hide certain content from bots, obfuscate email addresses, enable Accelerated Mobile Pages (AMP) and more.

The bug that exposed the user data was in an older HTML parser that the company had used for many years. However, it did not get activated until a newer HTML parser was added last year, changing the way in which internal web server buffers were used when certain features were active.

As a result, the internal memory containing potentially sensitive information was being leaked into some of the responses returned to users as well as to search engine crawlers. Web pages with the sensitive data were cached and made searchable by search engines like Google, Yahoo and Bing.

The leakage was discovered almost accidentally by Google security engineer Tavis Ormandy while he worked on an unrelated project. As soon as he and his colleagues realized what the strange data they were seeing was, and where it was coming from, they alerted Cloudflare.

This all happened on February 18th. Cloudflare immediately assembled an incident response team and killed the feature that was causing most of the leakage within hours. A complete fix was in place by February 20th. The rest of the time, until the incident was publicly disclosed Thursday, was spent working with search engines to scrub the sensitive data from their caches.

“With the help of Google, Yahoo, Bing and others, we found 770 unique URIs that had been cached and which contained leaked memory,” said John Graham-Cumming, Cloudflare’s CTO, in a blog post.

According to Graham-Cumming, the leakage might have been going on since September 22, but the period of greatest impact was between February 13 and February 18, when the email obfuscation feature was migrated to the new parser. Cloudflare estimates that around one in every 3.3 million HTTP requests that had passed through its system potentially resulted in memory leakage. That is about 0.00003 percent of all requests.

Even so, because of the nature of the exposed data the incident was very serious that Cloudflare customers might decide to they want to take action, like forcing users to change their passwords.

“I’m finding private messages from major dating sites, full messages from a well known chat service, online password manager data, frames from adult video sites, hotel bookings,” Ormandy wrote in an entry on Google Project Zero’s bug tracker during the incident. “We’re talking full https requests, client IP addresses, full responses, cookies, passwords, keys, data, everything.”

Taken from an original post on ITWorld.com February 24, 2017

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