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    DLL Hack in Notepad++

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    • donhoD
      donho
      last edited by

      @Claudia-Frank said:

      but at that point, it isn’t in the responsibility of Don anymore, is it?

      Good point :)

      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • Claudia FrankC
        Claudia Frank @donho
        last edited by

        @donho said:

        @Claudia-Frank said:

        That’s exactly what I meant, the only thing you could do is
        to have a secure download with the signed dlls.

        Just want to be more clear:

        1. DONE: to have a secure download (https)
        2. DONE: with the signed dlls
        3. TODO: notepad++.exe checks the certificate of scilexer.dll. If the certificate checking failed, then Notepad++ won’t be launched.

        #3 is address to the problem mentioned in the Wikileaks.

        Yes, from my point of view that’s the solution for this particular issue.

        Cheers
        Claudia

        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
        • dailD
          dail @Claudia Frank
          last edited by

          @Claudia-Frank

          but at that point, it isn’t in the responsibility of Don anymore, is it?

          Being signed ensures the right files get installed on the system. After that it is impossible for an exe to validate other files if it can’t validate itself first.

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          • Claudia FrankC
            Claudia Frank
            last edited by Claudia Frank

            @dail

            don’t get this - if the file is signed, can’t npp exe call a function to check scintillas signature again?
            I mean, when a dll get’s signed it provides an unique stamp so before loading the library couldn’t
            you check this stamp?

            Cheers
            Claudia

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            • dailD
              dail
              last edited by dail

              can’t npp exe call a function to check scintillas signature again?

              Yes it can. But if an attacker has access to SciLexer.DLL why wouldn’t they just attack notepad++.exe. There is never a case where notepad++.exe is from a privileged location and loads SciLexer.DLL from a non-privileged location.

              I think we need to take a step back because this discussion doesn’t sound like it is specific to Notepad++ and Scintilla. There are programs every day that have to load DLLs and have to make sure they are valid.

              Claudia FrankC 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • Claudia FrankC
                Claudia Frank @dail
                last edited by

                Good point but isn’t the beauty of this hack that there is just one function call which needs to be passed through to get
                the same privilege as the main process? If it is running unprivileged good but if user runs it as administrator …

                You are right - loading a dll is a security issue and there is no safe way if MS doesn’t provide a way to run a program
                in an encapsulated and signed environment. Something like CI+ or the HDMI content protection. But for this special issue,
                I don’t see how it could be solved otherwise.

                Maybe a blog worth reading
                https://blogs.technet.microsoft.com/srd/2009/04/14/ms09-014-addressing-the-safari-carpet-bomb-vulnerability/

                and there is one other issue which might be interesting. If the dll gets verified before load, this breaks npp for all
                that use a different scintilla dll at the moment. I’m thinking about @cmeriaux for example.

                Cheers
                Claudia

                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • Claudia FrankC
                  Claudia Frank
                  last edited by

                  Jfi - need to stay up early - I’m off.

                  Cheers
                  Claudia

                  1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • dailD
                    dail
                    last edited by

                    just one function call which needs to be passed through to get the same privilege as the main process?

                    That would assume you bypassed the Windows OS and got into the process space of Notepad++, which by then you have other issues ;)

                    Maybe a blog worth reading…

                    Will look at it tomorrow when I have a bit more time.

                    The safest solution would just be link the SciLexer statically instead of loading it dynamically but I’m not saying this is the right solution

                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                    • donhoD
                      donho
                      last edited by

                      @dail

                      The safest solution would just be link the SciLexer statically instead of loading it dynamically but I’m not saying this is the right solution

                      Yes, you’re right. it’ll be in the roadmap. In the meantime, I will do the quick fix - checking the scilexer.dll before loading it.

                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                      • donhoD
                        donho
                        last edited by donho

                        This headline is misleading. The DLL exists for CIA assets to use the cover app while it’s executing other code under the hood. From my reading, it’s not meant to be used against the person using notepad++, it’s to let them use notepad++ without raising any red flags while the DLL does data collection in the background. Those apps listed are the cover apps that look normal, the DLL hijack is to make them malicious with the knowledge of the operator.

                        ref: https://www.reddit.com/r/sysadmin/comments/5y0iqa/notepad_users_cia_has_had_a_dll_hijack_for_your/

                        @dail @Claudia-Frank
                        I agree that once users’ PC are compromised, the certificate checking is meaningless.
                        However, it makes harder (more job) to hack by checking certificate.
                        Just like knowing the lock is useless for people who are willing to go into my house, I still shut the door and lock it every morning when I leave home.

                        We are in a f**king corrupted world! Sigh

                        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                        • Alan KilbornA
                          Alan Kilborn
                          last edited by

                          I’m trying to get my head around this. No, not the part about the vulnerability, I understand that; the part I don’t understand is why all of a sudden this is like some big revelation…

                          Claudia FrankC 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                          • Claudia FrankC
                            Claudia Frank @Alan Kilborn
                            last edited by

                            @Alan-Kilborn
                            Don’t know if I understand you correctly. I guess Don and dail are very well aware about
                            the issue but when such a hack gets public it needs to be addressed. Don’t know
                            if you ever where in the position to explain to your IT Security department that such a hack
                            can’t be avoided as long as the operating system doesn’t ensure a safe environment.
                            They simply ignore it - as long as you don’t provide “a” solution it is marked a vulnerable and
                            you don’t get the permission to use this software anymore.
                            Notepad++ is used in companies - at least in the ones that I was working for.

                            Cheers
                            Claudia

                            Alan KilbornA 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                            • Alan KilbornA
                              Alan Kilborn @Claudia Frank
                              last edited by

                              @Claudia-Frank

                              Ah, okay Claudia, I think you understood my question and I understand your response. Thank you. Over my long period of observation, Windows seems inherently unsecure, probably because it is backing its way into security rather than having it be a major part of the design criterion. Sad.

                              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                              • young-developerY
                                young-developer
                                last edited by young-developer

                                I think there is no sens in checking certificates or staff like that because project is open source and everybody could create their own version of npp.

                                P.S. If someone is paranoid then could simply check md5 hash of original files(dlls and so on) :D

                                Alan KilbornA Claudia FrankC 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                • Alan KilbornA
                                  Alan Kilborn @young-developer
                                  last edited by

                                  @young-developer

                                  Yes, well, in this case you’d have to check the MD5 on the SciLexer.dll that will be loaded, which is perhaps a different one than the one that you think will get loaded. :)

                                  1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                  • Claudia FrankC
                                    Claudia Frank @young-developer
                                    last edited by Claudia Frank

                                    @young-developer

                                    I think there is no sens in checking certificates or staff like that because project is open source and everybody could create their own version of npp.

                                    Not if the private key is kept private ;-) (so it is open source with parts being not open)
                                    NO ;-) I don’t want to start a new discussion whether this makes sense. :-)

                                    If someone is paranoid then could simply check md5 hash of original files(dlls and so on)

                                    Nope, md5 is considered insecure.

                                    But all in all you are correct and Don, dail etc… do also agree once users’ PC are compromised …

                                    Cheers
                                    Claudia

                                    young-developerY 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                    • young-developerY
                                      young-developer @Claudia Frank
                                      last edited by

                                      @Claudia-Frank ,
                                      SHA-2 (SHA-256) or SHA-3 could be checked as well, just to be certain everything is ok and sleep calmly at night ahhaha :D

                                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                                      • Mikhail ShilovM
                                        Mikhail Shilov
                                        last edited by

                                        Exploit Notepad++ (SciTE) ;-)

                                        dailD 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                        • dailD
                                          dail @Mikhail Shilov
                                          last edited by

                                          @Mikhail-Shilov

                                          I still don’t understand what makes this unique to Notepad++/SciTE/Scintilla. You could do the same thing to any dll file.

                                          Mikhail ShilovM 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                          • Mikhail ShilovM
                                            Mikhail Shilov @dail
                                            last edited by

                                            There is nothing unique here. I could do the same thing with any dll file. Just you were unlucky to turn up in Wikileaks. :)

                                            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
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