Ghost trace on the wire? Using key evidence for informed decisions

Vasile, Diana A. and Kleppmann, Martin and Thomas, Daniel R. and Beresford, Alastair R.; (2019) Ghost trace on the wire? Using key evidence for informed decisions. In: 27th International Workshop on Security Protocols. University of Cambridge, GBR, pp. 245-257. ISBN 9783030570422 (https://doi.org/10.17863/cam.41061)

[thumbnail of Vasile-etal-IWSP2019-Ghost-trace-wire-using-key-evidence-informed-decisions]
Preview
Text. Filename: Vasile_etal_IWSP2019_Ghost_trace_wire_using_key_evidence_informed_decisions.pdf
Accepted Author Manuscript

Download (443kB)| Preview

Abstract

Modern smartphone messaging apps now use end-to-end encryption to provide authenticity, integrity and confidentiality. Consequently, the preferred strategy for wiretapping such apps is to insert a ghost user by compromising the platform's public key infrastructure. The use of warning messages alone is not a good defence against a ghost user attack since users change smartphones, and therefore keys, regularly, leading to a multitude of warning messages which are overwhelmingly false positives. Consequently, these false positives discourage users from viewing warning messages as evidence of a ghost user attack. To address this problem, we propose collecting evidence from a variety of sources, including direct communication between smartphones over local networks and CONIKS, to reduce the number of false positives and increase confidence in key validity. When there is enough confidence to suggest a ghost user attack has taken place, we can then supply the user with evidence to help them make a more informed decision.

ORCID iDs

Vasile, Diana A., Kleppmann, Martin, Thomas, Daniel R. ORCID logoORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0001-8936-0683 and Beresford, Alastair R.;