Microsoft is making it easier for the Thai government to break web encryption
The Thai government is looking to take greater control
over its citizens' web encryption, according to a new report from
Privacy International, and Microsoft is part of the problem.
At issue is the Thai government's root certificate, which
is used to verify HTTPS-enabled websites. Windows automatically trusts
the certificate, but many competing operating systems do not. Used
maliciously, the root certificate could allow the government to smuggle
malware into otherwise legitimate pages, or present counterfeit versions
of entire websites. Privacy International cites Thailand's history of
government surveillance as good reason to be suspicious.
The report also claims that a 2014 Facebook outage in
Thailand, which occurred amid a military coup, was orchestrated not only
to censor users but to circumvent the social network's encryption, as
well.
The Thai government has long exerted tight control over
the internet, and the Thai military junta has only escalated the
crackdown since taking power in 2014. Citizens have been jailed for
criticizing the monarch on social media, and the legislature has moved to centralize
its web controls. The report also notes that the government conducted
downgrade attacks in September 2014, forcing users to send emails via
unencrypted channels where they can be easily intercepted.
“Trusting a national root certificate from a country
whose governments have a history of human right violations and a poor
record on civil rights and freedom of speech should not be taken
lightly,” Eva Blum-Dumontet, a research officer at Privacy
International, said in a statement
Microsoft is the only major web company that
automatically trusts the Thai national root certificate. Apple’s Mac OS X
does not accept the national root certificate by default, nor do the
Chrome or Firefox web browsers. In its report, Privacy International
called on Microsoft to not trust the certificate by default “as a
precautionary measure.”
In a statement to The Verge, Microsoft said
Thailand’s root certificate meets its standards. “Microsoft only trusts
certificates issued by organizations that receive Certificate Authority
through the Microsoft Root Certificate Program,” a Microsoft
spokesperson said. “This program is an extensive review process that
includes regular audits from a third-party web trust auditor. Thailand
has met the requirements of our program and you can review the details of the latest audits here and here. This thorough review, backed by contractual obligations is not reflected in Privacy International’s assessment of the risks.”
This isn’t the first time that concerns have been raised over certificates. Last year, both Mozilla and Google
announced that they would no longer trust certificates issued by WoSign
and StartCom, two China-based certificate authorities, amid concerns
over suspicious activity. (StartCom, an Israeli CA, was quietly acquired
by WoSign in 2015.) The web companies found that WoSign had back-dated
some certificates, raising the possibility that they could be used to
impersonate websites or conduct surveillance.
The report also provides new details on a brief Facebook blockage
that occurred in May 2014. At the time, Thailand’s Information
Communications Technology (ICT) Ministry said that the social network
was blocked to “stop the spread of critical messages” about the military
coup. A military spokeswoman later blamed the half-hour outage on
“technical problems with the internet gateway.”
But Privacy International, citing sources close to the
ICT and in Thailand’s telecommunications sector, reports that although
the government may have been trying to muzzle online criticism by
blocking Facebook, it was also trying to circumvent the service’s SSL
encryption. One source in the telecoms sector was asked to contact
Facebook about sending traffic over HTTP, rather than the more secure
HTTPS protocol.
The government’s so-called “door-knocking” strategy does
not appear to have worked, since there is no evidence that encryption
was circumvented on Facebook. But Privacy International says the
incident underscores a broader authoritarian trend in Thailand, where
internet service providers (ISPs) and telecom companies are closely
linked to the government, and where authorities are increasingly
pursuing low-cost forms of online surveillance.
The article was published on : theverge
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