FW: [db-wg] Proposal to deprecate CRYPT-PW authorisation in the RIPE Database
Hi, Personally I don't agree with the proposal. It's wrong from several points of view. First of all, "There are currently ~3500 mntner objects in the RIPE Database that have only CRYPT-PW authorisation. There are about 300 mntner objects that have mixed authorisation of CRYPT-PW and some other authorisation types." I think the number of the objects in the DB with only CRYPT-PW authorisation shows that the method is useful and handy. Speaking about weakness... I remember the previous global deprecation of no-authorisation-at-all. The main argument was a case which involved several hundreds objects changing by an MISTAKE. I think then the deprecation was the right thing. Are there cases which involves cracking objects with CRYPT-PW authorisation? Maybe we should compare the gravity of the consequencies of leaving the authorisation scheme with complexity of mainteinance mostly informational resource? Then: "While maintaining and protecting objects in the RIPE Database is the responsibility of the respective maintainer, the RIPE DB WG agreed that it's the responsibility of the community to ensure that only appropriate tools and algortihms are used and maintained." means for me: all users of the DB are right, but the WG is more important. Am I right? Maybe we should leave the resolution of the problem to the maintainers? There are several methods of authorisation: if someone want to severe the protection of his/her objects he/she can do it right now without any modifications! I should say about one more point. For several types of organisations in Russia (for example) there are some restrictions about using encryption and keys of some sort (for example in the e-mail messages). I think the news will bring additional concerns and problems for the organisation (I think not only in Russia). Conclusion: the proposal is rather early, unreasoned and unnessesary. Kind regards, Vladislav Potapov Ru.iiat It seems that Dear colleagues, Here follows the proposal to deprecate CRYPT-PW authorisation in mntner objects in the RIPE Database. Comments would be appreciated. Background and motivation ------------------------- In the RIPE Database there are several authorisation types currently supported: CRYPT-PW, MD5-PW, PGPKEY and X509. These authorisation types define what kind of authorisation tokens can be used in "mntner" objects. CRYPT-PW authorisation type is based on UNIX crypt() functionality and is vulnerable to both dictionary and brute force attacks given the fixed password length and lack of cryptographic strength given today's computing power. While maintaining and protecting objects in the RIPE Database is the responsibility of the respective maintainer, the RIPE DB WG agreed that it's the responsibility of the community to ensure that only appropriate tools and algortihms are used and maintained. Since CRYPT-PW does no longer fulfill this requirements with the reasons given above, the WG also agreed to phase out CRYPT-PW. PGPKEY and X.509 have been the recommended authentication schemes for some time (http://www.ripe.net/db/support/security/security.html) MD5-PW shares two weaknesses with CRYPT-PW: passwords are sent in clear together with update requests and MD5 is vulnerable to dictionary attacks,as well. Still, MD5-PW will not be phased out together with CRYPT-PW, since at least the dictionary attack can be prevented by chosing passwords or pass phrases of appropriate length and entropy. MD5 offers a short path of migration away from CRYPT-PW without major change in processes. LIRs should, however, seriously consider a migration towards a public key based authentication scheme (PGPKEY or X.509). The MD5-PW method will be addressed separately. We propose to deprecate the CRYPT-PW authorisation step-by-step. Affected objects ---------------- There are currently ~3500 mntner objects in the RIPE Database that have only CRYPT-PW authorisation. There are about 300 mntner objects that have mixed authorisation of CRYPT-PW and some other authorisation types. Plan ---- 1. Gather mntner objects: group A: only CRYPT-PW authorisation group B: CRYPT-PW and (PGP or X509 or MD5) authorisation 1a. E-mail the contacts of those mntner objects (notify, admin-c, tech-c, mnt-nfy) to notify them about the coming change. 1b. notify the DB-WG mailing list 1 month later: 2. Modify the RIPE Database software: 1) reject any change to mntner object that adds new CRYPT-PW. 2) show a warning if CRYPT-PW was used during authorisation. 3) show a warning if object being updated still contains (existing) CRYPT-PW. 2a. E-mail the contacts of the mntner objects (notify, admin-c, tech-c, mnt-nfy) notifying them about the change and the next steps. 2b. notify the DB-WG mailing list 1 month later: 3. Modify the RIPE Database software: 1) disable CRYPT-PW in the syntax 2) disable CRYPT-PW in authorisation 3a. Modify mntner objects. group A: auth: is changed to MD5-PW, new password generated. group B: auth: CRYPT-PW is changed into "remarks" line "remarks: "your object was modified due to CRYPT-PW deprecation" is added 3b. Notify the contacts of the mntner objects: group A: explanation about the changes done, and URL with details on how to 'recover' the locked mntner object (similar to NONE deprecation process) group B: explanation about the changes done 3c. notify the DB-WG mailing list 4. Finished. -- Katie Petrusha RIPE NCC
Hi, On Thu, Oct 05, 2006 at 11:16:54AM +0400, Potapov Vladislav wrote:
I should say about one more point. For several types of organisations in Russia (for example) there are some restrictions about using encryption and keys of some sort (for example in the e-mail messages). I think the news will bring additional concerns and problems for the organisation (I think not only in Russia).
Changing from CRYPT-PW to MD5-PW doesn't incur any operational changes, and doesn't require key management and crypto of any sort, but *will* improve security. Security issues in the IRR DB impact all of us (like "fake objects, use that to leverage a routing attack"). I support the proposal to remove CRYPT-PW, as MD5-PW is a better replacement, which isn't requiring any changes on the day-to-day operational side. Gert Doering -- NetMaster -- Total number of prefixes smaller than registry allocations: 98999 SpaceNet AG Mail: netmaster@Space.Net Joseph-Dollinger-Bogen 14 Tel : +49-89-32356-0 D- 80807 Muenchen Fax : +49-89-32356-234
participants (2)
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Gert Doering
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Potapov Vladislav