On Fri, 2002-08-16 at 09:11, robert walker wrote:

> A huge amount of infrastructure is managed remotely via
> SSL and IE these days. It just boggles the mind the
> extent to which the security integrity of that
> infrastructure is now under a cloud unknowing.

Actually, the SSL vulnerability is a very predictable answer to an old
question. For a while now, one of the big "what ifs" of Internet
security has been "What if one day, the SSL infrastructure is completely
compromised?" The most common hypothetical example of this was the
compromise of a Verisign root signing key.

Predictions have ranged from the death of e-commerce, to the end of the
world as we know it.

Now, it's not hypothetical any more. Until this is patched and the
majority of users upgrade (in other words, give it two years), anyone
can forge site certificates that seem valid to 90% of Internet users.
The result? The news hasn't reached the "real world" at all. The story
has stayed on news-for-nerds websites and in the technical section of
mainstream press. E-commerce hasn't skipped a beat.

Certainly none of our[1] customers, who were so adamant when we were
speccing their web-applications that it _must_ be secured with SSL, have
come screaming to us wondering what to do now anyone can
man-in-the-middle them.

I'm not sure whether to be saddened or wryly amused. I think I'll go
with the latter.

Charles Miller
   [1] Well, none of mine anyway.

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