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Reading this question, Different users get the same cookie - value in .ASPXANONYMOUS

and search for a solution, I start thinking, if it is possible for some one to really steal the cookie with some way, and then place it on his browser and login lets say as administrator.

Do you know how form authentication can ensure that even if the cookie is stolen, the hacker does not get to use it in an actual login?

Is there any other alternative automatic defense mechanism?

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5 Answers 5

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Is it possible to steal a cookie and authenticate as an administrator?

Yes it is possible, if the Forms Auth cookie is not encrypted, someone could hack their cookie to give them elevated privileges or if SSL is not require, copy someone another person's cookie. However, there are steps you can take to mitigate these risks:

On the system.web/authentication/forms element:

  1. requireSSL=true. This requires that the cookie only be transmitted over SSL
  2. slidingExpiration=false. When true, an expired ticket can be reactivated.
  3. cookieless=false. Do not use cookieless sessions in an environment where are you trying to enforce security.
  4. enableCrossAppRedirects=false. When false, processing of cookies across apps is not allowed.
  5. protection=all. Encrypts and hashes the Forms Auth cookie using the machine key specified in the machine.config or web.config. This feature would stop someone from hacking their own cookie as this setting tells the system to generate a signature of the cookie and on each authentication request, compare the signature with the passed cookie.

If you so wanted, you could add a small bit of protection by putting some sort of authentication information in Session such as a hash of the user's username (Never the username in plain text nor their password). This would require the attacker to steal both the Session cookie and the Forms Auth cookie.

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    The requireSSL=true, is something that I have miss. I think this is one of the most important.
    – Aristos
    Mar 24, 2010 at 14:14
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The scenario where a cookie can be stolen happens in a public wireless environment. While you or I would never operate in such a setup, it may be impossible to prevent your customers from doing so.

If the attacker knows what secure site you're connected to, the idea is that your browser can be tricked into posting to a non-secure version of the same url. At that point your cookie is compromised.

That's why in addition to httpOnlyCookies you'll want to specify requireSSL="true"

<httpCookies httpOnlyCookies="true" requireSSL="true" />

I disagree with The Rook's comment, in that I find it unfair;

@Aristos i updated my answer. But to be honest, if your using a Microsoft development platform your application will be inherently insecure. – The Rook 22 mins ago

Security doesn't happen by accident and it doesn't happen "right out of the box", at least not in my experience. Nothing is secure until it's designed to be so, regardless of the platform or the tools.

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There are many ways that a session id can be leaked to an attacker. XSS is the most commonly used attack to hijack a Session ID and you should test for XSS vulnerabilities in your application. . A common method of improving the strength of a session is to check the IP address. When the user logs in, record the ip address. Check the IP address for every request, if the IP changes then its probably a hijacked session. This secuirty measure could prevent legitimate requests, but that is very unlikely.

Do not check the X-Forwarded-For or User-Agent, its trivial for an attacker to modify these values.

I also recommend enabling httpOnlyCookies in your web.config file:

<httpCookies httpOnlyCookies="true"/>

This makes it more difficult for an attacker to hijack a session with javascript, but its still possible.

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    The problem with IP address checking is that a lot of people are behind load balancers these days, which means the IP address is not stable for users.
    – Yishai
    Mar 24, 2010 at 1:27
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    @The Rook, can you provide real data supporting your (vague) statement?
    – Bruno Reis
    Mar 24, 2010 at 4:56
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    So the company with the most software products has the highest number of vulnerabilities ? I would think that would just be common sense. If you follow that logic to the extreme, then the most obscure platform must be the most secure.. security by obscurity ? Not a good way to make a platform decision.
    – markt
    Mar 24, 2010 at 5:39
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    @The Rook: It seems to me that typical web vulnerabilities, such as XSS are mostly platform independent. Mar 24, 2010 at 21:25
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    @Rook: Nothing to apologize for. You are entirely free to disagree with me. All I ask is that you make an honest effort to explain the source of that disagreement, so that it doesn't become personal. Sep 20, 2010 at 7:41
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I don't know the specifics of the cookie in question but it's generally bad practice to store both the username and password in a user cookie. You generally want to only store the username in the cookie along with other non sensitive information. That way the user is prompted to provide their password only when logging in.

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  • @Jason, the way in which a cookie can be stolen and used has nothing to do with storing a user name and password in the cookie. (I'm not the downvoter).
    – Yishai
    Mar 24, 2010 at 1:28
  • You should not store either the username or the password in the cookie. The safest and sanest way to use cookies is to only insert a single value in the cookie, for example the hash of the correct username, the IP address the connection was made from and some server-side secret value. Store this hash into your database in a row with the username, and use it to fetch the correct data. You should always assume that either the user or someone else WILL tamper with cookie values if you let them, they should be cryptographically secure.
    – Tuna-Fish
    Mar 24, 2010 at 1:49
  • I was only trying to simply demonstrate that storing the password in the cookie was not a good idea in the first place. I agree with Tuna-Fish that a hash would be a good idea for storing the username but I was trying to convey the idea simply to put them on the right track, Mar 24, 2010 at 13:57
  • I place +1 just because even if the login info on cookie are totally encrypted, the password is unknown even to the system (hash checked), and nothing shown on any cookie, how ever is not bad to say that again and again.
    – Aristos
    Mar 24, 2010 at 21:09
  • @Tuna-Fish: Actually, the way ASP.NET does it is even safer: it stores an arbitrary value that cannot easily be guessed at. This value is used as a lookup to retrieve the session dictionary on the server side, which is what contains any information about the user (but never their password). Sep 18, 2010 at 2:26
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I am working on this, and I am coming up with an idea, that I am not sure if it is 100% safe, but is an idea.

My idea is that every user must pass from the login page.
If some one stole the cookie, is not pass the login page, but is go direct inside to the rest pages. He can not pass the login page, because did not know the really password, so if he pass he fail anyway.

So I place an extra session value, that the user have been pass with success the login page. Now inside every critical page, I check that extra session value and if found it null, I login off and ask again for the password.

Now I do not know, maybe all that done all ready by microsoft, need to check it more.

To check this idea I use this function that direct make a user logged in.

FormsAuthentication.SetAuthCookie("UserName", false);

My second security that I have all ready fix and use, is that I check for different ips and or different cookie from the same logged in user. I have made many think on that, many checks (if is behind proxy, if is from different countries, what is look for, how many times I have see him, etc...) but this is the general idea.

This video show exactly what I try to prevent. By using the trick I have describe here, you can not just set the login cookie only.

Just sharing my ideas...

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    Not sure I understand what you're getting at. May be a language problem. Sep 18, 2010 at 2:25
  • @Steven I just place a flag on the session data (that are different from the login data) that the user has been pass the login page.
    – Aristos
    Sep 18, 2010 at 9:03
  • Ok, but if the user logs in and then their session is hijacked, the flag will be set already. Or am I missing something? Sep 18, 2010 at 10:26
  • @Steven he must hijack 2 different cookies, one for the login, one for the session. The one is transfer only using ssl. I think that is more difficult to hack 2 different cookies (with different way of code/decode/variables) than one. its a way to connect this cookies together. He can not log and hijack the session, because the log keep the critical information of permissions. This is for case that someone try to crack the cookies, or sniff them.
    – Aristos
    Sep 18, 2010 at 10:32
  • @Steven this vide youtube.com/watch?v=yghiC_U2RaM is show what I try to prevent.
    – Aristos
    Sep 20, 2010 at 12:07

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