[cabfpub] Concerns regarding Mozilla Root Program/Baseline Requirements

Ryan Sleevi sleevi at google.com
Fri Aug 2 14:55:31 MST 2013


On Fri, Aug 2, 2013 at 2:28 PM, kirk_hall at trendmicro.com
<kirk_hall at trendmicro.com> wrote:
> We also agree.  We were part of all BR discussions, and the effect of rekeying was never discussed.  If it had been, our position would have been that rekeying would not make a cert that was issued before the BRs become subject to the BRs -- that would put CAs in the position of having to breach their valid pre-BR contracts (which promised rekeying if needed) with their customers -- something no CA would have agreed to, barring a showing of an extraordinary security risk which we don't have here.
>
> Disclosure:  we have no certificates affected by this discussion, but think the Forum would do better to focus on actual, current risks that need to be remedied, and let the improvements we have already made through the BRs take effect as older certificates expire by their terms.

Kirk,

I think the clearly fundamental disagreement on 'issuance' puts at
risk every other advance we might make in the BRs to address the
actual, current risks, which is why we raised this issue and are
thankful to see the spirited discussion.

It's been made abundantly clear that, during discussions on
expirations, CAs were implicitly assuming that re-keying and
re-issuance would be exempt from the BRs. However, I think that
highlights the challenge - if that's a valid interpretation, there's
absolutely nothing in the BRs to suggest it's "dates only" - after
all, why not issue arbitrary extensions, unverified names, etc? Why
not add new fields or extensions? After all, if the pre-BR contracts
promised certain functionality that the BRs prohibit - whether it be
expiration or any other aspect - why wouldn't this be acceptable?

You can see that, at a minimum, we should least converge on an
acceptable definition about what certificate fields can be
manipulated, and what the CA is obligated to do when issuing new
certificates under pre-BR contracts.

While not exactly a "Yes" vote for Rich's proposal, I think it's
certainly the most reasonable attempt to close this hole.

I just hope and expect CAs are fully aware and considering the
implications of the language - as it appears they may not have when
negotiating the BRs - and how this might affect other provisions:
domain validation, subject information, EKUs, revocation responders,
serial numbers/entropy, etc. It's entirely possible that such
'reissued' certificates will differ much more significantly than just
flipping some dates and/or a key.

Cheers,
Ryan

>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: public-bounces at cabforum.org [mailto:public-bounces at cabforum.org] On Behalf Of Steve Roylance
> Sent: Friday, August 02, 2013 6:46 AM
> To: Rich Smith; jeremy.rowley at digicert.com; 'Sigbjørn Vik'; public at cabforum.org
> Subject: Re: [cabfpub] Concerns regarding Mozilla Root Program/Baseline Requirements
>
> +1
>
> ..and just to be clear, we are talking about a re-key where only the key (and therefore SKI) change as well as the unique elements of serial number
> and start date.   All other information remains the same as the previous
> certificate.    This is what the majority of players in the CA industry
> today deem "re-issuance" and it's mainly due to the complexity of PKI on platforms coupled with the increase in virtualisation where keys seem to be lost more frequently that has caused the CA industry to offer these types of services to help PKI grow - without the need for customers to buy separate insurance cover to help pay for this service or be charged a 2nd
> time for accidental loss.   It's not something one CA can take away by
> itself and it's not easily something one CA can change by itself, but it's one area we all seemed to miss when looking at reduction of maximum certificate duration from 60 to 39 so that should be the focus (As Rich states and as I identified).
>
>
> Steve
>
>
> On 02/08/2013 14:30, "Rich Smith" <richard.smith at comodo.com> wrote:
>
>>Jeremy,
>>I agree with your reasoning, but at the same time, I don't think that
>>we ever really thought in all the way through regarding the
>>re-key/reissuance of certificates which had already been sold.  As I
>>said in my recent reply to Sigbjorn, I'm not really all that concerned
>>with certs sold for longer than 60 month term prior to the BRs.  If the
>>consensus is that those need to have time cut off, I can live with
>>that, but I would like to see us come up with a reasonable compromise
>>to deal with those certs which are fully under the BR umbrella that
>>fall into the 60 to 39 month change over period.
>>-Rich
>>
>>> -----Original Message-----
>>> From: public-bounces at cabforum.org
>>> [mailto:public-bounces at cabforum.org]
>>> On Behalf Of Jeremy Rowley
>>> Sent: Friday, August 02, 2013 7:26 AM
>>> To: 'Sigbjørn Vik'; public at cabforum.org
>>> Subject: Re: [cabfpub] Concerns regarding Mozilla Root
>>> Program/Baseline Requirements
>>>
>>> As pointed out, a ten year or five year timeline for implementing
>>> change in the industry is very long.  This was discussed extensively
>>> during adoption of the BRs where we finally agreed to a five year
>>> timeline that would shift to 3 years in 2015.  I'm strongly opposed
>>> to going back and re-evaluating these timelines now, especially
>>> considering the amount of discussion, debate, and compromise went
>>> into it last time.
>>>
>>> -----Original Message-----
>>> From: public-bounces at cabforum.org
>>> [mailto:public-bounces at cabforum.org]
>>> On Behalf Of Sigbjørn Vik
>>> Sent: Friday, August 02, 2013 4:56 AM
>>> To: public at cabforum.org
>>> Subject: Re: [cabfpub] Concerns regarding Mozilla Root
>>> Program/Baseline Requirements
>>>
>>> I think the BRs are clear on what they require, and the EV
>>> definitions clearly spell out that renewals and reissuances create
>>> newly issued certificates. All new certificates require valid validity periods.
>>> While I can understand that people may want to discuss if the rules
>>> are optimal, I dislike CAs claiming ignorance of the rules, or
>>> exception to the rules since they have done things differently in the
>>> past. If someone wants to claim the rules are unclear, do so before
>>> assuming a particular interpretation, not afterwards.
>>>
>>> Opera is happy to work with the group to define optimal rules, but we
>>> dislike CAs engaging in creative reinterpretation of the rules. If we
>>> can't trust that CAs follow the rules decided upon, then the rules
>>> are close to worthless.
>>>
>>> In addition to reasons mentioned previously about why constrained
>>> validity periods is a good idea, there is also the point about the
>>> web moving forwards. For us to be able to upgrade requirements, ditch
>>> insecure practices, and promise a secure experience in the future, we
>>> need to limit the time limit of certificates today. This is basic
>>> insurance for the web in the future. Any exceptions we carve out
>>> today, take away from this insurance, and might end up costing us a
>>> lot. This is not a zero-sum game, and decisions we make today might
>>> have serious consequences some years down the road.
>>>
>>> This discussion has also highlighted some other issues:
>>> * It seems some CAs are happy to issue backdated certificates. We
>>> should probably spell out that signing, issuance and first validity
>>> dates should all be as close as possible, with a maximum discrepancy
>>> allowance.
>>> * To be able to verify this, we should also require that any CT
>>> registrations happen within that time limit. I will contact the CT
>>> team and ask them to consider this.
>>> * It seems audits don't catch CAs issuing certificates contrary to
>>> the BR.
>>> What can we do to ensure that audits catch such issues?
>>> * Does the CABForum need an explicit objective?
>>>
>>> On 01-Aug-13 15:08, Rich Smith wrote:
>>> > Taking Ryan's definition and subsequent logic would effectively
>>> > nullify all pre-BR agreements made with thousands of CA customers
>>> > who bought certificates for terms greater than the now allowed 60
>>> > months max (and soon to be 39 month max).  My lay opinion is that
>>> > such
>>> action
>>> > would open the CAs to lawsuits for breach of those agreements.
>>>
>>> For CAs not to follow the BRs would presumably open them to lawsuits
>>> from those who rely on the CAs for trust. For browsers not to follow
>>> due diligence and best practices would presumably open them to
>>> lawsuits from their customers. So if you care about potential
>>> lawsuits, the score is
>>> 2-1 for not issuing such certificates. However, I think potential
>>> lawsuits are irrelevant. The goal of this group should be to secure
>>> the web, not to ensure the short-term profits for individual members.
>>> (See the last point above, about an objective.)
>>>
>>> On 01-Aug-13 17:00, Steve Roylance wrote:
>>> > [...] in 2015 when the
>>> > industry flips to a 39 month max I believe from my engineering team
>>> we
>>> > would have had a similar issue to others, again due to the existing
>>> > contract precedence understanding that others have mentioned.
>>>
>>> That would be strange. Since the BRs were adopted in November 2011,
>>> all CAs have known (and been audited on) the fact that after 1 April
>>> 2015 the maximum validity period is 39 months. For CAs today to sell
>>> certificates valid more than 39 months past that date, and promise to
>>> reissue them at any point would be shooting themselves in the foot.
>>>
>>> --
>>> Sigbjørn Vik
>>> Opera Software
>>> _______________________________________________
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>>> https://cabforum.org/mailman/listinfo/public
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