29C3 - Version 1.9

F/a{hr-p).l//a,n
2.9/C-3

Speakers
Sebastian Schinzel
Schedule
Day Day 1 - 2012-12-27
Room Saal 4
Start time 23:00
Duration 01:00
Info
ID 5044
Event type Lecture
Language used for presentation English
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Time is NOT on your Side

Mitigating Timing Side Channels on the Web

In this year’s talk, I tie on my 28c3 talk and present timing side channels from a defending viewpoint: How can one mitigate timing side channels? Aren’t random delays sufficient to prevent timing side channels in practice? What is the minimum size of random delays to be effective? Are there other delay strategies besides random delays that are more effective and efficient?

Timing side channels are vulnerabilities in software applications that leak sensitive information about secret values such as cryptographic keys. They differ from common intrusive vulnerabilities such as Buffer Overflows or SQL-Injection because the attacker sends normally looking requests to the server and infers secret information just from the time it took to process the request. Timing attacks are getting increasingly well understood by day-to-day penetration testers and in academia, breaking Web standards such as XML Encryption [1], or helping to fingerprint Web Application Firewalls [2]. At 28c3, I gave the talk “Time is on my Side” [3], which gave an overview of timing attacks, introduced a set of tools for timing attacks and explained practical timing attacks against real applications.

In this year’s talk, I tie on my 28c3 talk and present timing side channels from a defending viewpoint: How can one mitigate timing side channels? Aren’t random delays sufficient to prevent timing side channels in practice? What is the minimum size of random delays to be effective? Are there other delay strategies besides random delays that are more effective and efficient?

I am going to present the state-of-the-art of timing side channel mitigation. Furthermore, I show the results of a practical evaluation of the timing attack mitigations.

  • [1]: Bleichenbacher's Attack Strinkes Again: Breaking PKCS#1 v1.5 in XML Encryption. Tibor Jager, Sebastian Schinzel, Juraj Somorovsky. 17th European Symposium on Research in Computer Security (ESORCIS 2012), http://www.nds.rub.de/research/publications/breaking-xml-encryption-pkcs15/
  • [2]: WAFFle: Fingerprinting Filter Rules of Web Application Firewalls, Isabell Schmitt, Sebastian Schinzel, https://www.usenix.org/conference/woot12/waffle-fingerprinting-filter-rules-web-application-firewalls
  • [3]: Time is on my Side. Sebastian Schinzel. http://events.ccc.de/congress/2011/Fahrplan/events/4640.en.html
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