_________________________________________ Security Advisory NSOADV-2010-002 _________________________________________ _________________________________________ Title: Google Wave Design Bugs Severity: Low Advisory ID: NSOADV-2010-002 Found Date: 16.11.2009 Date Reported: 18.11.2009 Release Date: 19.01.2010 Author: Nikolas Sotiriu (lofi) Mail: nso-research at sotiriu.de URL: http://sotiriu.de/adv/NSOADV-2010-002.txt Vendor: Google (http://www.google.com/) Affected Products: Google Wave Preview (Date: =< 14.01.2010) Not Affected Component: Google Wave Preview (Date: >= 14.01.2010) Remote Exploitable: Yes Local Exploitable: No Patch Status: partially patched Discovered by: Nikolas Sotiriu Disclosure Policy: http://sotiriu.de/policy.html Thanks to: Thierry Zoller: For the permission to use his Policy Background: =========== Google Wave is an online tool for real-time communication and collaboration. A wave can be both a conversation and a document where people can discuss and work together using richly formatted text, photos, videos, maps, and more. (Product description from Google Website) Description: ============ All this possible attacks are the result of playing 4 hours with Google Wave. I didn't check all the funny stuff, which is possible with the Wave. 1. Gadget phishing attack: -------------------------- The Google Wave Gadget API can be used for phishing attacks. An attacker can build his own phishing Gadget, share it with his Google Wave contacts an hopefully get the login credentials from a user. This behavior is normal. The Problem is, that this "bug" makes it easier to steal logins. 2. Virus spreading attack: -------------------------- Uploads Files are not scanned for malicious code. An attacker could upload his malware to a wave and share it to his Google Wave contacts. Proof of Concept : ================== A proof of concept gadget can be found here: http://sotiriu.de/demos/phgadget.xml Solution: ========= 1. No changes made here. Workaround: Don't trust Waves. 2. Google builds in AV scanning. Disclosure Timeline (YYYY/MM/DD): ================================= 2009.11.16: Vulnerability found 2009.11.17: Sent PoC, Advisory, Disclosure policy and planned disclosure date (2009.12.03) to Vendor 2009.11.23: Vendor response 2009.12.01: Ask for a status update, because the planned release date is 2009.12.03. 2009.12.03: Google Security Team asks for 2 more week to patch. 2009.12.03: Changed release date to 2009.12.17. 2009.12.15: Ask for a status update, because the planned release date is 2009.12.17. => No Response 2009.12.21: Ask for a status update. 2009.12.29: Google Security Team informs me, that there are no changes made before 2010.01.03. 2010.01.14: Google Security Team informs me, that uploaded file will be now scanned for malware. Google Gadgets will be not updated. 2010.01.19: Release of this Advisory