Russia creates its own TLS certificate authority to bypass sanctions

By Bill Toulas  March 10, 2022 11:06 AM  
https://www.bleepingcomputer.com/news/security/russia-creates-its-own-tls-certificate-authority-to-bypass-sanctions/


Russia has created its own trusted TLS certificate authority (CA) to solve 
website access problems that have been piling up after sanctions prevent 
certificate renewals.

The sanctions imposed by western companies and governments are preventing 
Russian sites from renewing existing TLS certificates, causing browsers to 
block access to sites with expired certificates.

TLS certificates help the web browser confirm that a domain belongs to a 
verified entity and that the exchange of information between the user and the 
server is encrypted.

Signing authorities based on countries that have imposed sanctions on Russia 
can no longer accept payments for their services, leaving many sites with no 
practical means to renew expiring certificates.

After a certificate expires, web browsers such as Google Chrome, Safari, 
Microsoft Edge, and Mozilla Firefox will display full-page warnings that the 
pages are insecure, which can drive many users away from the site.

A domestic authority

The Russian state has envisioned a solution in a domestic certificate authority 
for the independent issuing and renewal of TLS certificates.

“It will replace the foreign security certificate if it is revoked or expires. 
The Ministry of Digital Development will provide a free domestic analogue. The 
service is provided to legal entities – site owners upon request within 5 
working days,” explains the Russian public services portal, Gosuslugi 
(translated).

However, for new Certificate Authorities (CA) to be trusted by web browsers, 
they first needed to be vetted by various companies, which can take a long time.

Currently, the only web browsers that recognize Russia’s new CA as trustworthy 
are the Russia-based Yandex browser and Atom products, so Russian users are 
told to use these instead of Chrome, Firefox, Edge, etc.

Sites that have already received and are currently using these state-supplied 
certificates include Sberbank, VTB, and the Russian Central Bank.

https://www.documentcloud.org/documents/21408455-tls_list2?responsive=1&title=1

Russian media has also been circulating a list with 198 domains that reportedly 
received a notice to use the domestic TLS certificate, but for now, its use 
hasn’t been made mandatory.

https://www.interfax.ru/russia/827230

A problematic proposal

Users of other browsers like Chrome or Firefox can manually add the new Russian 
root certificate to continue using Russian sites that feature the state-issued 
certificate.

However, this raises the concerns that Russia could abuse their CA root 
certificate to perform HTTPS traffic interception and man-in-the-middle attacks.

This abuse would ultimately lead leading to the new root certificate being 
added to the certificate revocation list (CRL).

This would render these domestic certificates invalid, and Chrome, Edge, and 
Firefox would block access to any websites using them.

Certificate authorities are supposed to be universally trusted. However, as 
Russia is not currently enjoying any level of trust, it is unlikely for the 
major browser vendors to add them to their root certificate stores.

Russia has taken some drastic measures to lessen the impact of western 
sanctions on its economy.

Many have presumed that the time to cut ties with the global internet and push 
its netizens to the “Runet” has come.

In response to these rumors, the Russian Ministry for Digital Technologies 
flatly denied that there’s a plan to switch off the internet from inside in a 
statement shared with local news outlets.

--
_______________________________________________
Link mailing list
[email protected]
https://mailman.anu.edu.au/mailman/listinfo/link

Reply via email to