[tor-dev] Of CA-signed certs and .onion URIs

Tom Ritter tom at ritter.vg
Fri Nov 14 17:08:38 UTC 2014


There's been a spirited debate on irc, so I thought I would try and
capture my thoughts in long form. I think it's important to look at
the long-term goals rather than how to get there, so that's where I'm
going to start, and then at each item maybe talk a little bit about
how to get there.  So I think the Tor Project and Tor Browser should:

a) Eliminate self-signed certificate errors when browsing https:// on
an onion site
b) Consider how Mixed Content should interact with .onion browsing
c) Get .onion IANA reserved
d) Address the problems that Facebook is/was concerned about when
deploying a .onion
e) Consider how EV treatment could be used to improve poor .onion readability

(If you're not familiar with DV [Domain Validated] and EV [Extended
Validation] certificates and their UI differences, you should take a
peek. For example [0]. There are other subtleties and requirements on
EV certs like OCSP checking that removes the indicator, and the
forthcoming CT effort in Chrome, but that's mostly orthogonal.)

--------------------
a) Self Signed Errors on .onion

A .onion specifies the key needed. As far as little-t tor is
concerned, it got you to the correct endpoint safely, so whatever SSL
certificate is presented could be considered valid.

However, if the Hidden Service is on box A and the webserver on box B
- you'd need to do some out-of-application tricks (like stunnel) to
prevent a MITM from attacking that connection.  So as Roger suggested,
perhaps requiring the SSL certificate to be signed by the .onion key
would be a reasonable choice.   But if you make that requirement, it
also implies that HTTP .onions are less secure than HTTPS .onions.
Which may or not be the case - you don't know.

I'm not religious about anything other than getting rid of the error:
I don't like that users are trained to click through security errors.

This is a weakly held opinion right now - but I think it's fair to
give DV treatment to http://.onion because it is, from little-t tor's
point of view, secure.  Following that conclusion, it is therefore
fair to accept self-signed certificates and _not_ require a
certificate for a https://.onion be signed by the .onion key.
(Because otherwise, we're saying that SSL  on .onion requires more
hoops to achieve security than HTTP on .onion, which isn't the case.)

--------------------
b) Mixed Content on .onion

This is a can of worms I'm not going to open in this mail. But it's
there, and I think it's worth thinking about whether a .onion
requesting resources from http://.com or https://.com is acceptable.

--------------------
c) Get .onion IANA reserved

I think this is fairly apparent in itself, and is in the works [1].
Not sure its status but I would be happy to lend time in whatever IETF
group/work is needed if it will help.

--------------------
d) Address the problems that Facebook is/was concerned about when
deploying a .onion

There are reasons, technical and political, why Facebook went and got
a HTTPS cert for their .onion.  I've copied Alec so hopefully he'll
agree, refute, or add.  But from my perspective, if I were Facebook or
another large company like that:

i) I don't want to train my users to click through HTTPS warnings.
(Conversely, I like training my users to type https://mysite.com)
ii) I don't want to have to do the development and QA work to cut my
site over to be sometimes-HTTP if it's normally always HTTPS
iii) It would be convenient if I didn't have to do stunnel tricks to
encrypt the connection between my Hidden Service server and (e.g.)
load balancer, which is on another box
iv) I'd really like to get a green box showing my org name, and it's
even better that it'd be very difficult a phisher to get that

(iii) can contradict with (A) above of course. Because I came to the
conclusion of allowing invalid certificates, a MITM could attack
Facebook between the HS server and load balancer. I'm not sure there
is an elegant solution there. One would probably have to tunnel the
connection over a mutually authenticated stunnel connection to prevent
a MITM. But frankly, if we assume users are used to clicking through
self-signed certs and we want to start the process of training them
_not_ to, Facebook would have to do this now _anyway_. So... =/  I
guess documenting the crap out of this concern and providing examples
may be the best solution based off my mindset right now.

It's awesome that Facebook set up a Hidden Service.  I'd love to get a
lot more large orgs doing that.  We should reach out and figure out
what the blockers are, what's painful about it, and what we can do to
help.  I would love doing that, it would be awesome.  (And I'm not
afraid to NDA myself up if necessary, seeing as I'm under NDA with
half of the Bay Area anyway.)

--------------------
e) Consider how EV treatment could be used to improve poor .onion readability

This is the trickiest one, and it overlaps the most with the question
of "Should we encourage CAs to issue certificates?"

EV treatment in Tor Browser is a tool in the toolbox. I think it would
be wasteful of written code and users who are accustomed to seeing it
to not make use of it.  I also think it dovetails nicely with how
unreadable HS addresses are and how much more unreadable they're going
to get soon when they get longer.

I don't want a system that _requires_ participating in the DNS or CA
model. Free or Paid, you still have to provide identifying information
- and for an anonymity project I think we can all agree that's
unacceptable.  But as we hopefully expand hidden services to more and
more corporate services - these organizations are legitimately
concerned about (e.g.) phishing, and it's unreasonable to expect users
to meticulously validate a .onion address.  (Let alone how you find
what the address should be validated against.)

But a problem is that if we allow a .onion to certify anything it
wants, it can certify any fraudulent information it wants.
Bootstrapping off the other axis of Zooko's Triangle (Secure and Human
Meaningful, but Centralized) is a way to combat that fraudulent
information. (Not the only way, but a way.)

Syrup-tan had an idea on irc: Have a DV certificate sign a certificate
that is valid for the .onion URL, and display the URL of the DV
certificate.  This doesn't eliminate phishing - I can register
facebok.com and then get that displayed.  But doing bootstapping off
DNS and DV certificates is a fairly low bar in terms of the cost to a
.onion operator. (There are other concerns here, I'm not completely
comfortable with repurposing the EV indicator in this way. Asa on irc
had the good point that if we did this, maybe we'd want to change the
EV green to another color just to be a little bit different. Not that
I really expect users to notice that though...)

Allowing an organization to purchase an EV certificate from a CA, and
display the organization's name in the address bar, is another way -
albeit a very high bar in terms of cost to an onion operator.

A petname system based off who-knows-what (for example the
namecoin/sovereign-keys like system of a land-grab, first-to-the-name
approach) is a third, and would meet the goal of not requiring
participating in the DNS and CA systems. but a high bar in terms of
engineering effort for Tor.

I think Tor Browser should do several of them.  I think the EV
certificates + partnering with CAs is dead simple and requires no
engineering effort on behalf of Tor Browser.  So that's a win, and I
think worth doing.  But there should be at least one more solution in
the short to long term (e.g. a petname approach).  Unfortunately, if
the time between now and the 'long term' solution is too long, it
locks out everyone who can't get an EV cert - which is a legitimate
concern. Perhaps after there's a spec Tor likes, some large
organization concerned about preventing phishing could throw some
engineering time at the problem.

Anyway, if it's not clear, I am volunteering to work on these things
as I'm able.

-tom

[0] https://ftt-uploads.s3.amazonaws.com/browser-ssl-ui-comparison.png
[1] https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/draft-grothoff-iesg-special-use-p2p-names/


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