NIST: How To Prepare For And Respond To A Certificate Authority Breach

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Publicated : 22/11/2024   Category : security


NIST: How To Prepare For And Respond To A Certificate Authority Breach


Guidelines could serve as basis for new FISMA rules



The federal governments National Institute for Standards and Technology (NIST) has issued its first-ever guidelines for government agencies and private-sector businesses to protect themselves in the wake of the breach of their digital certificate authorities.
A wave of certificate authority (CA) breaches during the past year-and-a-half -- including the
Flame malwares abuse of a Microsoft digital certificate
-- has been a wake-up call for many organizations. The reality is that many organizations in both the public and private sector dont have a detailed accounting of their digital certificates, their CAs, or who within their organizations own those certs.
NISTs new Preparing for and Responding to Certification Authority Compromise and Fraudulent Certificate Issuance guidelines bulletin, which it co-authored with Venafi, was in direct response to concerns about how a CA breach could affect agencies and businesses. The big thing now is that these attacks are taking place on CAs, says Paul Turner, vice president of products and strategy at Venafi. Thats why we worked with NIST on this.
Turner says while he cant speak for NIST, the guidelines issued by the agency likely will be put on the path to becoming part of FISMA (Federal Information Security Management Act) regulations. Right now, this is effectively a guideline, he says. Next is looking at including it as part of FISMA -- thats the most likely path.
[ Yet another CA is hacked, suspends issuing certificates -- and there likely will be more. See
Certificate Authority Uncovers Old Breach
. ]
Meantime, NIST recommends that organizations ensure their CA is secure, whether its an internal or external authority. That means security best practices and regular third-party audits. And if a CA suffers an impersonation attack or one of its Registration Authorities is compromised, it should have clear-cut emergency revocation response in place: The CA must revoke the certificates and inform the organizations identified as subjects in the fraudulent certificates and all potential relying parties that might rely on those certificates. If a CA system compromise or signing key theft occurs, the CA’s certificate(s) must be revoked by any CAs that have issued certificates to it, all subjects that the compromised CA has issued certificates to must be notified that they will require new certificates, and all possible relying parties must be notified, according to the guidelines published by NIST.
Venafis Turner says its not easy to ensure that a CA breach is detected as quickly as possible. The massive breach of now-defunct CA DigiNotar serves as a cautionary tale for any agency or company. The attack on DigiNotar focused on Iranian citizens, but there was also fallout for the Dutch government, which was the biggest user of DigiNotar [certificates]. The Dutch government had to get up and say, Dont trust these sites until we find all the certificates on the front-end and back-end that are relying on them, Turner says. Thats the big issue NIST is really focusing on here: Youve got to make sure you can respond.
If the breach had been more widespread, affecting bigger CAs such as Entrust or VeriSign, then the damage would have been much more severe, he says. Most organizations have not done a good job tracking their certificates and who owns them. Most organizations are not even close to prepared, he says.
Among NISTs recommendations: get a detailed inventory of your digital certs and corresponding CAs; have a backup option in place for replacing a certificate or acquiring a new one; and make sure you know the nature of a CA security incident when it occurs, such as whether it was a true breach of their systems or some sort of impersonation attack. The NIST bulletin is available
here
(PDF).
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NIST: How To Prepare For And Respond To A Certificate Authority Breach